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6 votes
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Why we need degrowth
7 votes -
Why does Germany continue to self-destruct?
7 votes -
The McDonald's theory of why everyone thinks the economy sucks
48 votes -
How Olympic curling stones are made | So Expensive
6 votes -
The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and Ideas
10 votes -
The region at the heart of Germany’s economic stagnation
6 votes -
Europe's single currency, used daily by about 350 million people, has become a hot topic in an unlikely place – Sweden
12 votes -
Is cinema dying? And if so, who is responsible? – A murder mystery
23 votes -
Something is golden in the state of Denmark – can Novo Nordisk's success really be a problem for the Danish economy?
8 votes -
It’s official: The era of China’s global dominance is over
22 votes -
Costco capitalism
23 votes -
What a striking new study of death in America misses
15 votes -
Rising long-term interest rates are posing the latest threat to a US economic ‘soft landing’
24 votes -
2023 Nobel Prize – This year's Nobel Prize announcements will take place between 2nd - 9th October 2023
22 votes -
With Novo Nordisk, Denmark wants to avoid the Nokia trap
14 votes -
"Zeitgeist | Requiem" by Peter Joseph | Official trailer
4 votes -
For the fourteenth year running, Iceland takes the top position in the Global Gender Gap Report by the World Economic Forum
11 votes -
Europe’s rightward drift is not set in stone: our new research should give hope to the left
12 votes -
It’s not just Japan: Aging populations threaten several leading economies
35 votes -
US national debt tops $33 trillion for first time
10 votes -
It's the beginning of the end for global oil demand, IEA chief says
13 votes -
Norway wealth tax pushes the rich to move to Switzerland – millionaire prime minister has embarked on a push to tax the wealthiest for social justice
41 votes -
How dollar stores quietly consumed America
14 votes -
The GDP gap between Europe and the United States is now 80%
37 votes -
Diamond prices are in free fall in one key corner of the market
31 votes -
We do not know the population of every country in the world for the past two thousand years
9 votes -
How were modern companies allowed to get so big in spite of antitrust laws? The mythology of horizontal merger efficiencies
20 votes -
The unmaking of India: How the British impoverished the world’s richest country
21 votes -
Novo Nordisk, the Danish company behind two popular obesity medications, is reaping huge profits and is now responsible for most of the country's economic growth
6 votes -
Towards a New Socialism
41 votes -
North American bison slaughter left lasting impact on Indigenous peoples
31 votes -
Rice prices soar, fanning fears of food inflation spike in Asia
17 votes -
How Japan's maglev train works
13 votes -
BRICS leaders to meet and discuss expansion
12 votes -
How universal basic income became the pessimist’s utopia
46 votes -
America's obsession with weight-loss drugs is affecting the economy of Denmark – Novo Nordisk's market capitalization has matched the GDP of its home country
17 votes -
China's property crisis deepens with developer Country Garden at risk of default
13 votes -
Analysis - Financial Times article - Lex in depth: how investors are underpricing climate risks
10 votes -
What a green monetary policy could look like
8 votes -
Fitch downgrades US credit rating from AAA to AA+
65 votes -
US President Joe Biden's IRA shuts Africa out of critical minerals supply chains
6 votes -
What US recession? It's a summer of splurging, profits and girl power
19 votes -
Southeast Asia moves closer to economic unity with new regional payments system using local currencies
10 votes -
Portugal’s bid to attract foreign money backfires as rental market goes ‘crazy’
45 votes -
Every generator is a policy failure
21 votes -
Autoenshittification: How the computer killed capitalism
83 votes -
US GDP grew at a 2.4% pace in the second quarter, topping expectations despite recession calls
31 votes -
How to ensure you won’t have public transportation
27 votes -
Confession: I like shrinkflation
I’ve been noticing food shrinkflation a lot here in Belgium lately. Smaller soda cans, biscuit packet counts going down, 125g becoming 115g etc. And honestly, to choose between the same size...
I’ve been noticing food shrinkflation a lot here in Belgium lately. Smaller soda cans, biscuit packet counts going down, 125g becoming 115g etc.
And honestly, to choose between the same size package getting more expensive vs less of it… I’ll take the latter. It’s reducing consumption. Which is great as a whole, but also selfishly if I’m buying a pack of crisps and I get to eat less of it … great.
Not so great on essentials obviously but those aren’t really hit by shrinkflation as much as snacks, etc.
Okay, that’s it. I do want to stress that I don’t like paying more for the same shit, but on a practical level, if I do, I much rather get less for the same price than have to spend more and be stuck getting the same quantity.
Especially if it’s junk food… I’ve even found myself disliking the old soda can sizes when I come across them. Having gotten used to the new ones, the old ones are straight up too much.
43 votes