by Tdarcos » Wed Aug 31, 2022 6:54 am
Casual Observer wrote: Mon Aug 29, 2022 2:21 pm
I haven't bought pop tarts in about 20 years so imagine my surprise when I opened the package and saw how fucking small they have become. They're at least a half inch shorter each direction and the icing barely covers the middle and is nowhere near consistent.
They've also cut the amount of fruit filling inside. I can taste the difference.
It's called a "stealth price increase." Instead of raising the price when costs go up due to increased expenses, if it is believed that customers are very price sensitive, or they know competitors will do the same thing, they'll reduce the size or volume. or cheapen the product, or both. Reducing size or weight only works for so long, until you can't reduce the size any further or there will be nothing left, (or you get busted for fraud). Eventually the price has to increase, but now it's a price increase on the now reduced size product.
Now the fraud part. Safeway sold cherry pies in snack size, similar to Hostess pies. As manufacturing costs went up, they switched from a strawberry fruit-based filling to an artificial cherry-flavored filling. The FTC caught them and imposed a fine because they later substituted grapes for cherries in their "cherry" pie. There wasn't so much as a gram of actual cherry in their "cherry pies."
[quote="Casual Observer" post_id=130892 time=1661808074 user_id=77]
I haven't bought pop tarts in about 20 years so imagine my surprise when I opened the package and saw how fucking small they have become. They're at least a half inch shorter each direction and the icing barely covers the middle and is nowhere near consistent. [/quote]
They've also cut the amount of fruit filling inside. I can taste the difference.
It's called a "stealth price increase." Instead of raising the price when costs go up due to increased expenses, if it is believed that customers are very price sensitive, or they know competitors will do the same thing, they'll reduce the size or volume. or cheapen the product, or both. Reducing size or weight only works for so long, until you can't reduce the size any further or there will be nothing left, (or you get busted for fraud). Eventually the price has to increase, but now it's a price increase on the now reduced size product.
Now the fraud part. Safeway sold cherry pies in snack size, similar to Hostess pies. As manufacturing costs went up, they switched from a strawberry fruit-based filling to an artificial cherry-flavored filling. The FTC caught them and imposed a fine because they later substituted grapes for cherries in their "cherry" pie. There wasn't so much as a gram of actual cherry in their "cherry pies."