That’s more to do with inadequate people choosing to live beyond their means. “No, we can’t afford it.” is a reply that my children have heard from me on many an occasion.Back to signs of a cost of living "something":
One in three families spend beyond their means and get into debt when their children go back to school.
Over 60pc of people surveyed said they were finding the expense of kitting out students a huge financial burden, according to research commissioned by the Irish League of Credit Unions.
I remember years ago a journalist asking random elected representatives the price of different grocery staples and most of them hadn't a clue.Cheap tricks like this are unnecessary... the price of milk is up. The price of fuel is up (largely due to taxes).
I think that might have been before the prices of different grocery staples oscillated wildly between different stores and chains.I remember years ago a journalist asking random elected representatives the price of different grocery staples and most of them hadn't a clue.
It was a good while ago - but even now the prices of own brand basic staples (milk, bread, butter, pasta, rice, tinned goods etc.) is practically identical across the likes of Lidl/Aldi/Dunnes/Tesco (and maybe SuperValu?). E.g. €1.25 for a litre or milk or €3.99 for 454g of butter.I think that might have been before the prices of different grocery staples oscillated wildly between different stores and chains.
Is that really the case? Every time I'm in a different branded store, the prices seems to differ alarmingly. The prices of butter especially.even now the prices of own brand basic staples (milk, bread, butter, pasta, rice, tinned goods etc.) is practically identical across the likes of Lidl/Aldi/Dunnes/Tesco (and maybe SuperValu?). E.g. €1.25 for a litre or milk or €3.99 for 454g of butter.
Wow! I assumed that you were just joking until I saw this...Sinn Fein research appears to be googling and relying on AI results... wouldn't surprise me if they are using US figures.
On Tuesday, Sinn Féin were forced to explain their embarrassing mistake after Pearse Doherty and a number of other Sinn Féin TDs repeatedly referred in the Dáil to SuperValu being owned by United Natural Foods Inc., a US-based firm rather than the Irish Musgrave Group.
The party put the mistake down to “human error” due to a search by Sinn Féin staff into Google Finance turning up a different ‘Supervalu’ company based in the US.
I know what I spend on shopping. I know that I spend the least when I shop in Lidl. but I don't know the price of individual items. When I buy cheese I look at the cost per Kilo as it's often the case that smaller packages are cheaper in real terms than larger ones... then again I can't remember my children's birthdays so I don't expect myself to remember what butter cost last week... probably part of my diagnosis.It was a good while ago - but even now the prices of own brand basic staples (milk, bread, butter, pasta, rice, tinned goods etc.) is practically identical across the likes of Lidl/Aldi/Dunnes/Tesco (and maybe SuperValu?). E.g. €1.25 for a litre or milk or €3.99 for 454g of butter.
I don't think that anybody else expects you to either...I don't expect myself to remember what butter cost last week
Thanks, that’s a huge reliefI don't think that anybody else expects you to either...
Unless you are trying to track spending in Dunnes or Supervalu to hit a voucher amount!don't think that anybody else expects you to either...
So they may have been comparing the price of branded milk (e.g. Avonmore) in the shop of a petrol station with the price of petrol.
And at €1.79 it would be more expensive.
But Avonmore is cheaper in supermarkets, own brand milk cheaper still, and it probably isn't the first time Avonmore milk bought in a corner shop \ station shop is more expensive than petrol.
Because, in common with Sinn Féin, their fact-checkers' research is generally sloppy and usually self-serving?No idea why The Journal chose the Lidl organic rather than normal litre...
Seems to be the case. The original article said that Lidl milk was 75c/L because of the shelf price label in the photo but this was subsequently corrected.Because, in common with Sinn Féin, their fact-checkers' research is generally sloppy
But even the correction fails to reflect that Lidl own brand regular (not organic) milk is €1.25/L like many of the other stores. And, usually, if 500mL is, say, 75c it doesn't follow that 1L is twice that as there's usually a slight premium for the smaller volume container. So I wouldn't be surprised if 1L of their organic milk was a little less than €1.50...Correction: The original version of this article listed the price of Coolree milk in Lidl as €0.75. Lidl’s price tag refers to the cost of Coolree milk per 500ml, so the correct price of a litre is €1.50.
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