The Experts™ are coming up with all kinds of predictions,
dire and otherwise, about the eventual percent-rise of said costs.
Those predictions do not matter at all.
Let me say that again: What ‘everybody’ is saying about how
much food costs are about to rise do not
matter one little bit when it comes to the question of what you, personally should or should not do
in response to this impending train wreck.
So, let’s take a deep, calming breath, and a big step back from the whole mess, and attempt to
apply some logical thinking to the problem, shall we?
Now, what we can know for sure is this: Yes. Prices on a
wide variety of things are going to
go up. They are already starting those first tiny hiccups, as goods and
services that are closely linked, in the here-and-now, to those various
products (mostly but not only corn) that are suffering the most – the biggest
part of the show is probably between
four and ten months out, which is when the manufacturers who are currently
using up the corn syrup and so forth from last
year’s crops will start having to actually pay through the nose for this year’s scrawny, sorry example of a
so-called harvest, phooey on it.
Does this automatically mean that you need to do something drastic?
Eh, maybe…maybe not.
The first thing to do is to stop and ask yourself what All
This really means for you.
I’ve been hearing a lot
of chatter lately about buying a super-sized freezer and packing it with all
kinds of meat ‘to save money during the crisis.’ To which I say, whoa up, there, pardner.
Freezers cost money. They cost money to buy, even if you’re
getting a really good deal off Craig’s
list or something. And they cost money to operate,
too – anywhere from $100 to $200 a year, depending on waaaay too many factors
to try to list out here but including things like how old the unit is, how well
you pack and maintain it, how hot the garage where it is probably kept gets,
and so forth.
So let’s say you get a $200 freezer from Craig’s list and it
costs you $150 a year to operate – if you use it for just one year, you need to
save around $29 a month to make it work out for you.
Let’s further say you’re currently buying $10 in beef each
week, and your goal in buying the freezer is to avoid paying more for it. If
the cost of beef goes up by 4% (which is one of the many predictions), that $10
will become $10.40 – an additional $1.60 a month. If it goes up by 10% (which
is the highest prediction I’ve seen, and which came with all kinds of…rather intense…political commentary
soooooo, BIG grain of salt), you’re looking at $1 more a week, or $4 a month.
If you’re only going
to do this while the crisis is on, you need another $25 a month in savings
to make it worth your while.
Which is really my point: Don’t rush into very large
lifestyle changes because of one
event.
I tell you what: It feels weird to warn people off rushing
to bulk buy. Personally I’ve found it to be a tremendous budget-booster, and it has actually sheltered me from the worst of the recent inflations
that have hit others pretty hard. The price of my raw materials has barely budged, really…and even things that have
gone up a lot by percentage haven’t
moved much by dollars paid.
But if you want to really make this pay for you, it’s not
just a reaction to this one crop
failure; it’s not something you’re going to do now, then toss aside in eighteen to twenty-four months when the
prices have settled back down.
To make it really pay off, it’s a lifestyle. And I really wouldn’t recommend rushing into it
whole-hog (whole hog! freezer! ha!), either. Because those savings don’t come free, my friends, they come by way of work, and plenty of it. You don’t get to just come home, unload the
groceries and call it a day – oh no. At the very least, you can add “repackaging
for freezer” to your to-do list before you can call yourself done. You have to make sure you maintain
good rotation in the freezer, too – otherwise, you end up with The Forgotten
Roast surfacing ‘at some point long
after it should have been used.’ Yet another
thing you have to do when on the
whole you’d really rather be doing anything
else.
Each step you take down the path adds more and more chores
to your list. Having grains in bins means inspecting the bins from time to
time, to make sure no moths or mold or other harmful things have gotten in
there. (And they do, no matter how
careful you are – eventually, you will
pop a lid off one of those buckets and get hit in the face by escaping moths.)
And of course, buying raw ingredients in bulk means more
cooking from scratch – which means more time in the kitchen, which means again less time on your backside. And it
always sounds ‘easy’ and ‘no big deal’ when you’re talking yourself into it (with
hints of ‘nostalgia’ and ‘domestic bliss’) – but then, well, it’s Wednesday
night and work was a killer and
@*^&@, I forgot to defrost anything, um, well, we could have nope out of that how about ugh, bugs got in it! OK, how about see: forgot to defrost anything, above
well…I guess I’ll do the old “defrost ground beef in the skillet by scraping
bits of it off the block as it thaws” trick…
Nights like that will kind of take the shine off the whole thing – and if you don’t actually want to be
doing All This but are only in it because there was this corn-thing a couple years ago? So, you bought all this meat, which is still in the freezer?
There is no shine
to it. It’s just painful, pure and simple. And a few such painful experiences
later, that freezer is just sitting out there in the garage running and running
and running, and all you ever do is glare at it resentfully as you pass by.
At which point, you’re losing
money in the long run.
Now, if I were to place bets today on where the pain is most
likely to be felt hardest by most people? It wouldn’t really be in meat. It would be in things like crackers and canned chili – those ubiquitous boxes and cans everybody has in their pantry, which we’re accustomed to popping
open and serving up alongside whatever is “for dinner.”
The prices of those
are going to go up, too; it won’t be commented upon like increases in milk and
dairy will be (because those things
are tracked and reported upon by Da Gummint), but given that corn syrup is in everything these days…I’d expect a $2.99
box of crackers to be $3.49 pretty quickly. And quietly. We might not even notice – even if we do, we might fuss
for a little bit, the first couple weeks, but then we quickly adjust to the
higher price and no longer even notice. $3.49 is the new ‘regular’ price, and
we toss them into our basket without a second thought.
If you want to win the ‘I didn’t get my backside handed to
me during The Great Corn Crop Failure Crisis of 2012™’ game – I’d say think that second time. Look at what you’re
buying, pay attention to how much you pay per ounce or serving, consider how
many servings you really get from a
box that says it has ‘12 servings’ in
it.
Don’t let them ‘sneak’ a 20% price increase in on you,
either by raising the price or putting fewer ounces of product in the
same-sized box. And don’t feel like you “have” to pay it, either. There are always alternatives. Some are as easy as
switching to a generic brand; some are as challenging as ditching ‘everything
that comes in a box’ for home-made alternatives or just deciding not to eat
whatever-it-is anymore.
But above all else, don’t
rush to stock up just because you’re afraid of rising grocery prices. It’s been
my personal experience that doing that kind of thing only because of a one-time event really doesn’t pay – it’s only if
you’re making a long-term commitment to a bulk-bought lifestyle that you really
come out ahead on that deal.
Simply being aware
of what you buy, and why you buy it, and what your other choices might be goes a lot further toward sheltering you from
higher prices, good times or bad,
than buying up a freezer you don’t really need and filling it up with meat you
won’t actually eat.
3 comments:
Stocking up can be tough. I live in the Northeast and try to have enough canned goods and water on hand to last a couple of weeks in case of major snowstorms resulting in power outages. Lots of perishables aren't at the top of my list. My favorite story is from a friend who has a year (a year!) of dehydrated foods stored. I got a blank stare when I asked where she was storing the water to rehydrate it (apparently she hadn't thought that far ahead!)
another reason why i totally look up to you. thank you for this post.
iousdGood post (as always!). I liked the bit about "The Forgotten Roast" - I have a rabbit in the freezer. I got it back in 2008, and it's moved from PA to NJ to NJ to SC to NJ with me. It must be the most well-travelled dead rabbit on the planet, and it doesn't even twitch (thank God, as it's frozen stiff and hasn't a nose). It's still good, so one day we'll eat it.
Taking up using a freezer does represent a lifestyle-change (like hoarding water for the dried foods!). Something one has to look long and hard at.
Post a Comment