Around here, the €1 hamburger 15y ago cost €1.3 a year ago which is more or less the inflation. This year it is at €1.6
The last 2 years prices for food went up a bit more than the inflation, but not that much more. But as with anything that’s basic needs, it impacts the poor a lot more.
Now if you look at vegetables and other fresh food, it’s even worse and I think it’s a lot more important than the cheapest burger at McDonald’s that was way too cheap to begin with.
Ehh, debatable. Food is arguably the most important commodity, so its prices alone are a good indicator of where we are as a people.
This isn’t “food”, it’s one highly advertised menu item at a fast food restaurant. Not “a sack of rice”, but a Mcdonalds sandwich.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menu_cost
https://www.mashed.com/137972/the-truth-about-mcdonalds-dollar-menu/
Further reading on “sticky” menu prices, and how the value menu may have been a costly marketing gimmick for years.
Around here, the €1 hamburger 15y ago cost €1.3 a year ago which is more or less the inflation. This year it is at €1.6
The last 2 years prices for food went up a bit more than the inflation, but not that much more. But as with anything that’s basic needs, it impacts the poor a lot more.
Now if you look at vegetables and other fresh food, it’s even worse and I think it’s a lot more important than the cheapest burger at McDonald’s that was way too cheap to begin with.
Someone ought to do a price comparison of various fruits and veg between 2019 and now so we get a clearer picture.
The McChicken is just an example, but an extremely important one because guess what most poor people eat?