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Inflation, or whatever, is worrying food for thought Your Money & You John Ellis

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Planning notices

Planning notices

In ation is easing they say. Consumer prices only rose by 0.5% month on month according to the gures from the Central Statistics O ce (CSO) last week, the 19th straight month where the annual increase in the CPI has been at least 5.0%.

e CSO published the national average prices for April showing increases on basic foodstu s – sugar up more than 35%, milk more than 20%, butter nearly 19% and eggs up 18% with the overall annual grocery bill up by €1,200 in the past year. Commenting on these gures and putting a monetary value on the increases, Anthony Dawson of the CSO said: “ e national average price of several items rose in April 2023. ere were price increases for an 800g loaf of white sliced pan (+23c), an 800g loaf of brown sliced pan (+18c), two litres of full fat milk (+44c), and a pound of butter (+66c) when compared with April 2022.” e Government is being accused of sitting on its hands, but it has little power to command the retail sector to drop prices. Minister of State Neale Richmond called an emergency meeting of the Retail Forum last week. Nothing came of it really. In a statement Retail Ireland Director Arnold Dillon said: “ e retail sector fully appreciates the concerns of customers at the high levels of food in ation. Retailers are actively working to minimise the impact on consumers of massive EU-wide commodity price increases, and this will continue. Speci c pricing decisions are a matter for individual retailers, but intense competition in the sector will ensure that consumers bene t from falling commodity prices. is is happening already and will continue.”

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Along with that, the most signi cant increases in the year were seen in housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels which was up 20.7% and food and non-alcoholic beverages which rose by 13.1%. Electricity up 51.3%, gas up 55.8% and then add the higher mortgage interest repayments up 41.0%. Interest rates gone from 2.92% on average in February to 3.54% for March –greater than any other European country. ere is all manner of advice owing around in media streams from the sane to the outright bizarre. Seemingly we “love cheap” forgetting the downside and we will eat anything as we don’t care about quality. e idea is mooted that we are in an emergency situation and the market is failing and the Government should move to cap food costs.

Mr Richmond said Irish food in ation had been among the lowest in Europe in recent years with the EU average at 27% over the last two years, while Ireland was 17%. Last year average EU food in ation was 19%, while here it was 13%.

Energy and commodity costs are exacerbating the problem, Mr Richmond said. “ ere is a signi cant lag in how energy and commodity cost increases translate into consumer prices. Retailers held o increasing prices for a long as possible last year but could not absorb the massive cost increases inde nitely. We expect general in ation and food in ation to ease as we move through the year.”

Why are we in this mess?

Because of everything outlined above?. Yes. But are these not just the symptoms?

If we are in an emergency is it not due to a deeper problem that needs to be faced – the commodi cation of food?

In the abstract of the thesis john@ellis nancial.ie 086 8362622

‘Food: To Feed Or To Pro t” written by Emma Vandenbroeck, she says: “In the last century, food increasingly has become commodi ed in which it has become constructed as a mere commodity in a global food system. By putting the pro t-generating capabilities of food rst, the main goal of the food system lost track of its original purpose [which was] to feed the population.” Whatever it is, a few cents o the loaf of bread and bottle of milk isn’t really going to help.’.

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