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Smaller food packages same price!!! wtf

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Old 07-14-2008 | 01:41 PM
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Smaller food packages same price!!! wtf

Shoppers Fed Up As Containers Shrink
By The Salt Lake Tribune

Jun. 25--Besides paying more for a tank of gasoline, consumers are being hit with smaller food packages in grocery stores that cost the same amount of money as their larger predecessors.

The mantra used to be supersizing. Now, it's downsizing -- from cereal, margarine and ice cream to smaller packages of gum.

Kellogg Co. started shipping smaller boxes for five of its brands in June -- effectively raising prices for the second time this year.

"It's unfair," said Salt Lake City shopper Hazy Stonehocker, of Salt Lake City. "But there's nothing anyone can do."

Packages have been shrunk by an average of 2.4 ounces for Apple Jacks, Cocoa Krispies, Corn Pops, Froot Loops and Honey Smacks to offset rising costs for ingredients and energy used to manufacture and distribute the products, said Kellogg spokeswoman Susanne Norwitz.

In January, Kellogg increased prices in the single-digit range to offset higher costs. Its rival, General Mills Inc., started selling Cheerios and Wheaties cereals in smaller boxes last year.

Shoppers might not have noticed the change because grocers have typically pulled the larger packages when restocking shelves or have discounted the larger, older products separately.

"Our customers seem to be relatively OK with the downsizing," said Verna Dupaiz, grocery manager for Emigration Market in Salt Lake City. "People realize that the gas and food crunch is hard across the board."

There's more.

Unilever Foodsolutions reduced the size of its 3-pound cartons of Country Crock margarine by 3 ounces. Dreyer's shrunk the size of its ice cream containers from 1.75 quarts to 1.5 quarts, the equivalent of an ample serving. And Wrigley's cut the number of sticks in its packages of Juicy Fruit and other brands from 17 to 15.

Package downsizing has the potential of misleading consumers, Omprakash K. Gupta, professor of management at Prairie View A&M. University in Texas, said in an e-mail. Although manufacturers mark quantities on packages, research shows that consumers do not consult the amounts in calculating value.

That's why it's important for shoppers to look at unit pricing posted on grocery store shelves, said Lynn Dornblaser, senior analyst at the market research firm Mintel. She expects more package downsizing, but also much larger packaging for consumers who can afford cheaper, volume buying.

For their part, some manufacturers seem reluctant to discuss the changes. Officials from California-based Dreyer's, which acquired Salt Lake City's Snelgrove Ice Cream Co. in 1990, did not return telephone calls or e-mails. And the Wrigley's Web site is silent on the change while answering a variety of other questions, including whether dogs can eat gum. (They shouldn't.)

Still, there's an upside to the downsizing.

Many detergents have been reduced by half or a third of their former volume yet wash the same number of loads per package, according to Consumer Reports. Procter & Gamble, the largest detergent maker, and retailing giant Wal-Mart were behind the move to concentrate formulas to reduce packaging and shipping costs.

In addition, Hefty's Space Saver Pack is 40 percent smaller but contains the same number of bags (28). And it's made from 100 percent recycled paperboard for environmentally conscious consumers.

Smaller packages also could be reducing the amount of food consumers throw away, particularly for single or elderly consumers, said Barry Swanson, a member of the Institute of Food Technologists, in a e-mail.

On the flip side of that is a phenomenon known as overpackaging. Designed to attract consumers' attention, particularly for high-volume products such as soda, water, juices and vegetable oil, this entails packing goods in polyethylene terephthalate, even though cheaper materials are available, Clair Hicks, professor of Food Science at the University of Kentucky, said in an e-mail.

In addition, some vegetables and fruits are packaged in trays with overwrap. Fresh-cut salads have high-tech packaging to cut down on unsightly condensed moisture. And many poultry and meat products are overpackaged.

"The trend is still to give the premium look, which usually involves excess packaging," he said. "So in the premium category, overpackaging is the norm."
Old 07-14-2008 | 01:50 PM
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Saw this on the news...Pretty sneaky....
Old 07-14-2008 | 02:17 PM
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You're just noticing this?

WTF?


Would you rather they keep the same size and just raise the price? There are some good marketing reasons why they don't, but in the end it's the same thing.
Old 07-14-2008 | 02:34 PM
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From: PA
Originally Posted by Bearcat94
You're just noticing this?

WTF?


Would you rather they keep the same size and just raise the price? ......
Yes.....Inflation is one thing...Tricking people into thinking that the price is staying the same is deceptive...
Old 07-14-2008 | 03:07 PM
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From: N35°03'16.75", W 080°51'0.9"
Originally Posted by Whiskers
Yes.....Inflation is one thing...Tricking people into thinking that the price is staying the same is deceptive...
Yeah, but they've been doing this FOR YEARS.

Just one example, maybe you didn't notice (being in the UK, having a nanny do the shopping and stuff), but the ice cream mentioned (1.75 qt --> 1.5 qt) used to be a half gallon 2 or 3 years ago. They *all* used to be 1/2 gallons then they *all* changed. I don't remember getting a memo on that.
Old 07-14-2008 | 03:48 PM
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Originally Posted by Bearcat94
Yeah, but they've been doing this FOR YEARS.

Just one example, maybe you didn't notice (being in the UK, having a nanny do the shopping and stuff), but the ice cream mentioned (1.75 qt --> 1.5 qt) used to be a half gallon 2 or 3 years ago. They *all* used to be 1/2 gallons then they *all* changed. I don't remember getting a memo on that.
I wish I had a nanny
Old 07-14-2008 | 04:27 PM
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From: Los Angeles, CA
Originally Posted by Bearcat94
Yeah, but they've been doing this FOR YEARS.

Just one example, maybe you didn't notice (being in the UK, having a nanny do the shopping and stuff), but the ice cream mentioned (1.75 qt --> 1.5 qt) used to be a half gallon 2 or 3 years ago. They *all* used to be 1/2 gallons then they *all* changed. I don't remember getting a memo on that.
I just noticed the change to the smallest size box of Frosted Flakes and Breyer's 1/2 gallon ice cream > 1.5 quart container this year.

We mostly avoid small boxes of sugary cereals; Breyer's containers changed in the past 3 months. Breyer's is still my favorite, but we've switched over to getting more Rite-Aid/Thrifty half-gallons now.
Old 07-14-2008 | 06:54 PM
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Originally Posted by TSXmeister
Still, there's an upside to the downsizing.

Fewer fat people?
Old 07-14-2008 | 09:22 PM
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From: N35°03'16.75", W 080°51'0.9"
Originally Posted by Whiskers
I wish I had a nanny

Oh, sorry. I thought England + baby = nanny. I figured they followed you home from the hospital.


Regardless, I am certain this has been going on for some time. The 1/2 gallon Ice Cream might not have been "2 or 3 years", but I am sure it's been at least a year. Lots of what used to be 16oz canned goods are now ~14oz.

It's subtle. Everthing is properly labled, so I don't know if it's "deceptive".

What matters is the per unit (oz., lbs, etc) price and that's been going up steadily for the past year or so. It's really accelerated the past 4 - 6 months though.
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