Is greed causing shrinkflation?

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  • Опубликовано: 11 апр 2024
  • President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) are blaming corporate America for "shrinkflation," where a company charges the same amount for a product while reducing the product's size or quantity. Recently, Senator Bob Casey (D-Pa.) introduced the Shrinkflation Prevention Act, which declares shrinkflation a deceptive business practice and would forbid companies to engage in it.
    Casey, Biden, Warren, and other like-minded politicians maintain that the underlying cause of shrinkflation is "greed." But, as Andrew Heaton explains, greed is pretty much constant across industries and time periods. Shrinkflation is just a passive-aggressive form of inflation, which we are struggling with largely due to government fiscal policy.
    Written and starring Andrew Heaton.
    Photo credit: captcreate, Flickr; Brett Jordan, Flickr.

Комментарии • 799

  • @chadr.1340
    @chadr.1340 Месяц назад +298

    "Of course, none of us are greedy, it’s only the other fellow who’s greedy." Milton Friedman

    • @ab8588
      @ab8588 Месяц назад

      And fat

    • @Policy-Principle
      @Policy-Principle Месяц назад +5

      God dam hero.

    • @dontaskwhatkindofmusic
      @dontaskwhatkindofmusic Месяц назад +1

      If you like Friedman you gotta check out Karl Marx too, they go perfectly together

    • @Policy-Principle
      @Policy-Principle Месяц назад +4

      @@dontaskwhatkindofmusic Got any videos of him?

    • @JADED1620
      @JADED1620 Месяц назад +3

      ​@dontaskwhatkindofmusic how does karl marx and friedman go together. They are complete opposites.

  • @zunalter
    @zunalter Месяц назад +418

    I thought shrinkflation was referring to the IQ of the oval office inhabitant

    • @starkillersneed
      @starkillersneed Месяц назад +15

      No, it's scientifically impossible to shrink lower than a quark

    • @jeff-hh9mc
      @jeff-hh9mc Месяц назад +3

      I like your style.

    • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
      @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Месяц назад +4

      I think the word you are looking for is "implosion".

    • @HANKHILLFORTXGOVERNOR
      @HANKHILLFORTXGOVERNOR Месяц назад +2

      "You can have both" - Cotton Hill

    • @burnerjack01
      @burnerjack01 Месяц назад

      That's not shrinkflation, that's defecation.

  • @Rajaat99
    @Rajaat99 Месяц назад +369

    Andrew is the reason I watch Reason.

    • @republicoftexas3261
      @republicoftexas3261 Месяц назад +53

      Andrew and Remy

    • @CaptainZoidmerica
      @CaptainZoidmerica Месяц назад +3

      I see what you did there.

    • @CaptainZoidmerica
      @CaptainZoidmerica Месяц назад +5

      Don’t forget about Nathan

    • @kimjohnson8471
      @kimjohnson8471 Месяц назад +4

      He reminds me of Mayhem from Allstate😊

    • @bigreaderpike
      @bigreaderpike Месяц назад +2

      Well something like that does kind of exist you know of the Legion of Doom idea I think it's called the world economic Forum or something I mean if you listen to their speeches every year and they do kind of sound like a super villain convention

  • @leftoverpastaz1182
    @leftoverpastaz1182 Месяц назад +139

    Bring back mostly weekly. That was great.

    • @Myrborg
      @Myrborg Месяц назад +4

      Hear hear!

    • @germandust12
      @germandust12 Месяц назад +1

      Agree.

    • @armadillolover99
      @armadillolover99 Месяц назад +3

      Never forget what Reason took away from us in 2018.

    • @PotatoSmasher4242
      @PotatoSmasher4242 Месяц назад

      Now that you reminded me of it I have to rewatch all of mostly weekly.

    • @davidanalyst671
      @davidanalyst671 Месяц назад

      @@armadillolover99 This guy left reason in 2018. It would be like jon stewart leaving his show.

  • @samuelpaulson6416
    @samuelpaulson6416 Месяц назад +206

    Sound economics doesn't make for good political messaging. Politicians don't care about being right. They care about being re-elected. Blaming greedy corporations is a great way to make yourself look like the good guy and make your opponents look like the bad guys.

    • @Thenatureboy801
      @Thenatureboy801 Месяц назад

      until those greedy corporations begin lobbying for the politicians, then they can do whatever they want.

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад

      Same root cause as "shrinkflation" the bulk of consumers are economically ignorant morons.

    • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
      @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Месяц назад +14

      Ironic isn't it, considering every one of them is owned by Larry Fink & co.

    • @AndrewBurbo-zw6pf
      @AndrewBurbo-zw6pf Месяц назад

      I guess there wasn't much greed around until Joe got elected

    • @AlecMuller
      @AlecMuller Месяц назад +16

      But it only works if you've crippled people's ability to reason their way out of a paper bag. Government schools are doing exactly what they're designed to do!

  • @danielrizzo4927
    @danielrizzo4927 Месяц назад +84

    Inflation cannot be explained often enough. Inflation illiteracy in Venezuela allowed the government to control, expropriate and control more, they always blamed it on the private sector and businessmen. When they denounce companies, they are really denouncing themselves.

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 Месяц назад +16

      That’s why I’m getting very scared. The amount of people in America who fall for it….America isn’t doing too good 😢

    • @johnsmithers8913
      @johnsmithers8913 Месяц назад +10

      ​​@@misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      This, one major reason, how we got in this mess is the ignorance and lack of intelligence of the common man. Go back 40 years and even 100 years, the common man was better educated than any k-12 student today. We have also been importing people that are illiterate.
      A democracy can't survive when the voters can't think or understand.

    •  Месяц назад +5

      ​@@misanthropicservitorofmars2116It's a religion. Can't fight it with logic. The current situation is ironically the child of Hegel via Marx and Marcuse.

    •  Месяц назад +2

      ​@johnsmithers8913 A democracy is always reflective of the uninformed. Nobody has time to learn even half. And nobody is willing to let go of that power that would be the type to use it in the first place.

    • @johnsmithers8913
      @johnsmithers8913 Месяц назад +4

      Inflation is basic economics and I learned about economics in highschool, in the 70s. It's probably been 20 years since the majority of high school students learned about economics. Multiply that by numerous subjects,. especially history, and voters have certainly become more clueless about reality less able to critically think.

  • @itsallfunandgames723
    @itsallfunandgames723 Месяц назад +88

    This is the return to mid-2000s comedy we need.

    • @edenstonne
      @edenstonne Месяц назад +1

      Fr

    • @majermike
      @majermike Месяц назад +1

      such a well done video

    • @TheJeffbarrett
      @TheJeffbarrett Месяц назад +1

      I'm from the Dennis Miller Sam Kinison era and I approve this message!

    • @pgtmr2713
      @pgtmr2713 Месяц назад

      Fuck that, 90's comdey would be better.

  • @epicemmalee2000
    @epicemmalee2000 Месяц назад +114

    I just hate the gaslighting. Like everything else in life, government is not the solution.

    • @TombaFanatic
      @TombaFanatic Месяц назад +14

      I liked seeing the argument shift from "This won't cause inflation" to "inflation is clearly the product of corporate greed"

    • @TheJinashura
      @TheJinashura Месяц назад

      @@TombaFanatic Inflation... the one thing our gov can't make trans

    • @servicerockveterinarian4349
      @servicerockveterinarian4349 Месяц назад +8

      But the government allowed monopolies to be created in the last 50 years.

    • @karakaspar1791
      @karakaspar1791 Месяц назад +5

      What other choice do we have?

    • @fishingangler4315
      @fishingangler4315 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@karakaspar1791hilarious isn't it. People want the wild West to be the way.

  • @gomblebomble808
    @gomblebomble808 Месяц назад +48

    Companies just decided to be greedy yesterday!

  • @bfcourage
    @bfcourage Месяц назад +105

    Um, if your store is switching chicken eggs to quail eggs and keeping them the same price, you’re coming out ahead. Quail eggs cost way more than chicken eggs!

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 Месяц назад +1

      They’re absolutely delicious as well.

    • @nork22
      @nork22 Месяц назад +10

      At the same time, you need a dozen quail eggs to make 1 serving of scramble eggs on toast for 1.

    • @sicanady
      @sicanady Месяц назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @humbughumbughumbug
      @humbughumbughumbug Месяц назад

      That's kind of like the brains joke...
      "how much for a pound of cow brains?"
      "Dollar a pound."
      "How about mice brains?"
      "59¢ a pound."
      "Wow... What about those Biden brains?"
      "Billion dollars a pound."
      "A billion dollars??? Is that how valuable the knowledge inside Biden brains are??"
      "No... Don't you know how many Bidens you have to harvest before you get a pound of brains from them?"

    • @ChrisSmith-rm6xl
      @ChrisSmith-rm6xl Месяц назад +3

      @@nork22 The solution is obvious: switch to hummingbird eggs!

  • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
    @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD Месяц назад +107

    “You CLEARLY forgot about my coffee gun!”

    • @3dpyromaniac560
      @3dpyromaniac560 Месяц назад +8

      I love the libertarian horror movie sketch, watch it every couple weeks because of Andrew having different guns for everything

    • @roybiv7018
      @roybiv7018 Месяц назад +2

      Coffee gun?? I'm still trying to figure out a Shower Gun.

  • @travisthompson1679
    @travisthompson1679 Месяц назад +14

    My favorite is the people screeching about "record profits" not understanding that those are absolute numbers and that those "record profits" can't buy as much stuff as the previous year's lower profits.

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
    @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Месяц назад +36

    "Is greed causing shrinkflation?" It's disgusting that there are still people so economically ignorant that politicians can get away with that nonsense. They do not believe that inflation is caused by "corporate greed". They know exactly what causes inflation. Blaming corporations is like blaming Mickey Mouse. Just like cartoon characters, corporations don't really exist.

    • @smolpener7430
      @smolpener7430 Месяц назад

      Most people are aware of what causes inflation. Shrinkflation is the practice of reducing the quantity of product sold, rather than raising prices. It's purely a form of deception.
      It wouldn't cost a single company a cent to ban shrinkflation, they'd probably save money not needing to redesign their packaging constantly.
      Pretty ironic that you're so economically illiterate that you can't differentiate between the two, after spouting off about economic incompetence.

    • @7LegSpiders
      @7LegSpiders Месяц назад

      Mickey Mouse is part of the Marxist agenda.

    • @Kidsinamerica
      @Kidsinamerica Месяц назад +3

      Corporations are "people", dontchaknow....

    • @karakaspar1791
      @karakaspar1791 Месяц назад +1

      I mean… corporations have owners you know. Extremely wealthy owners… who’s one and only incentive is to maximize profits... regardless if people go hungry. That’s kind of the definition of greed? Elon musk dropped 40 billion on a whim to buy twitter when he could have like idk ended homelessness or something. Surely that would increase profits.
      Also I am embarrassingly a Disney theme park nerd and no we don’t blame Mickey Mouse, we blame bob chapek

    • @theotherguy6951
      @theotherguy6951 Месяц назад +5

      @@karakaspar1791 And how exactly can $40 billion end homelessness? Is Musk just going to give it to homeless people as a handout?

  • @kauboy9816
    @kauboy9816 Месяц назад +31

    "If theaters raise their ticket prices, consumers might go mini-golfing... or whoring! I would!"
    🤣🤣🤣
    That about killed me.

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki Месяц назад

      Why choose? Now presenting mini-ghoring.

  • @bite-sizedshorts9635
    @bite-sizedshorts9635 Месяц назад +7

    Shrinkflation didn't just start recently. I first noticed it around 1975. Yes, it's inflation, but shrinkflation was the food industry's attempt to hide it. I worked at a convenience store back then and noticed when candy bars went up in price. They went to 15 cents with a label that said "Still the same size!" Then later on, they made them a bit smaller with a label that said "Still the same price!" Then they raised the price and made them a bit larger with a label that said "New larger size!" They repeated this crap until now candy bars are over $1 each. That initial huge jump in inflation was caused by Nixon taking us off the gold standard in 1971. He put in wage and price freezes to delay the effects. This made people blame the huge jump in inflation on Jimmy Carter.

  • @Todd_Swank
    @Todd_Swank Месяц назад +14

    Imagine seeing the federal government lock down corporation salaries during WWII just to see the companies introduce multiple other methods of paying their workers through insurance and other perks and think the government can actually stop the market from progressing.

  • @danielrizzo4927
    @danielrizzo4927 Месяц назад +22

    Why is there never a legislation about limiting the “public spending” and the amount of money printed? Is the government the only one who is allowed to be “greedy”?

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki Месяц назад +1

      Nobody ever asks how we'll pay for it when it comes to "defence" spending, but will wail when it comes to social spending.

    • @wheel-man5319
      @wheel-man5319 Месяц назад

      Yep

    • @Individual_Lives_Matter
      @Individual_Lives_Matter Месяц назад

      Great point.

    • @ethanjames8371
      @ethanjames8371 Месяц назад +2

      There is. That’s what spending caps and debt ceilings are about. The problem is that our government is choosing to ignore them, and, by continuing to re-elect them, we’re letting them do it.

    • @suzybearheart530
      @suzybearheart530 Месяц назад +1

      One of my least favorite Obama moments was in 2009 when things were so bad, he lectured Americans on how they needed to be “skipping trips to Las Vegas” and even said something to the effect of “You, the people are NOT the federal government. You must tighten up the purse strings when things are tough”. I get he was making a joke but it was so tone deaf, especially to me since I had just been laid off.

  • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
    @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD Месяц назад +45

    I am starting to believe that to be qualified to be on a congressional committee on ANYTHING regarding financial matters, you MUST have never had to have at any point take an Econ course, because that would undermine the entire operation of systemically transferring wealth and power from the people to the federal government

    • @eldrago19
      @eldrago19 Месяц назад +2

      If wealth is being transferred to the federal government, why is the debt going up?
      If you've taken an Economics course I'd be delighted if you can explain that to me.
      I did one in college and the only explanation that springs to my mind is that wealth isn't going to the government but somewhere else instead. My pet theory (maybe you can find evidence to disprove it) is that the very rich are getting wealthier.
      Have a nice day.

    • @brianallen4657
      @brianallen4657 Месяц назад +9

      @@eldrago19Because government is spending more than they are taking in - that may be why debt is increasing.

    • @thewiirocks
      @thewiirocks Месяц назад

      Stupidity is the easy answer here. And normally it would be the right one. Unfortunately, this is too stupid even for this lineup of schmucks. This is just politicking, through and through. Our congress-critters are well aware that inflation is a problem. But by banking on the stupidity of the general populace, they attempt to shift blame away from their policies and onto their favorite whipping boys: Big Business
      Big Business doesn't actually see any huge negatives from this press, BTW. So they keep supporting leaders who hand them free money and create market barriers against competition. It's a lose-lose for everyone!

    • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
      @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD Месяц назад +5

      @@eldrago19 when I say “federal government” I mainly mean the people who run it.
      It’s no longer for the people by the people, it’s for the people by a select few individuals with connections.

    • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
      @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD Месяц назад

      And that doesn’t mean that the money being funneled into the federal government is being used for the benefit of the taxpayer, it’s being used to design a half-million dollar trash can

  • @mc80466
    @mc80466 Месяц назад +26

    When other people want more, it’s greedy. When you want more, it’s basic fairness. There is no difference between you wanting a higher salary, more vacation, and cheaper groceries than a company wanting to pay a lower salary, give less vacation, and more expensive groceries. In fact, the company is made of people whose salary and vacation depends on charging more for groceries and having employees take less vacation! Economics forces us to remove the moral salience of greed and treat it equally and logically as a rational aspect of much economic behavior.
    Also worth considering that the numbers just don’t work out when we want big corporations (in low wage sectors) to simply pay employees more. Quick example: Walmart has 2.1 million employees, 1.6 million in the US, so let’s say 1.6 million full time employees (40 hour/week * 52 weeks). If they raised everyone’s wage by $1/hr, let’s say it costs $1.10/hr because of payroll tax and other costs. That’s $1.10/hr * 2080 hr/yr * 1.6 mil employees = $3.66 billion per year. Their profits were $11.7 billion in 2023, so profits decrease by 31% with the $1 wage increase. They would no longer be a profitable business increasing wages by only $4/hr! This isn’t to say Walmart should or shouldn’t do anything, but only that demanding they pay more is not like asking someone with a billion dollars to give an extra dollar. It’s like asking someone with $12 dollars to give $4

    • @bisbee1678
      @bisbee1678 Месяц назад +4

      The problem is that the majority of Americans lack even the most basic economic literacy. Such elementary concepts as supply and demand, or the relation between printing trillions of dollars and rising inflation, are completely lost on them. It's not that any of this is particularly hard to understand, but rather that our people have been indoctrinated, not educated.

    • @johnsmithers8913
      @johnsmithers8913 Месяц назад +3

      In a way it's a function of our loss of "real" morality. Go back a few decades, and we understood that we all were competing for our self interest. No one really thought another person was more greedy than themselves.
      Now, everyone is trying to bend their own greed into a virtue. If society or another group doesn't give them privileges then the other person is morally bad.

    • @dustinabc
      @dustinabc Месяц назад +3

      Asking for $4, or threatening for it?
      Good ideas don't require force!

    • @mc80466
      @mc80466 Месяц назад

      @@bisbee1678 it’s true people lack basic economic literacy. I’m amazed sometimes at how people can have such strong opinions on economic issues all while having zero understanding of how anything works. And many of those people have the self awareness to admit they don’t. I don’t think it’s a matter of being indoctrinated. Economics was offered as an AP course to seniors in my high school so it’s not like most people would ever learn it

    • @mc80466
      @mc80466 Месяц назад

      @@dustinabc hmm I don’t think I follow what you mean that good ideas don’t require force. Like if paying people a certain amount was a good idea we wouldn’t have to mandate it by law (under threat of force)? I didn’t intend for my comment to endorse anarchy lol

  • @VortexStriker
    @VortexStriker Месяц назад +22

    If only the people that needed to watch this would watch this. The choir is well aware of basic economic principles. Still fun to watch. Preach on Mr. Heaton!

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад

      If only the people that need this had the cognative capacity to understand it. While intelligence is certainly not the only issue (I know plenty of intelligent people who are taken in by poor theory) it may be the largest and most difficult to overcome just due to the massive fraction of the population that simply cannot be educated beyond the most basic elementary school level.

    • @karakaspar1791
      @karakaspar1791 Месяц назад +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@TheDuckofDoom. i have a masters degree in accounting and I’m a cpa… this man has a very antiquated and naive understanding of economics. This entire video was straw man after straw man. No mention of monopolies stifling competition and swallowing small businesses whole. No mention of unrealized capital gains going entirely untaxed. No mention of the steady degradation of anti trust laws. The fact that he thinks that the government printing more money is the only thing that causes inflation shows his lack of understanding of the current economic system

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад +3

      ​@@karakaspar1791 I don't really care what title you claim. Argument from authority has no place in comments because anybody can, and does, claim to be anything. Arguments must stand entirely on their own legs. Besides that, accounting is only tangentially related to economic theory.
      Adding and removing currency from active circulation (Mostly printing and cash savings) are the only two things that affect inflation by definition.(supply and demand)
      eg. In 2009 the stimulous printing didn't cause a large jump in inflation because the financial shock also caused a large shift in personal saving habits which soaked up a lot of the stimulous printing.
      The CPI is not inflation, it is only a way to estimate the effect of inflation on some arbitrary synthetic "consumer" subset of the market. (Setting aside the multitude of inherent flaws and politically driven manipulation of the CPI.)

    • @ShunkUp
      @ShunkUp Месяц назад

      ​@@karakaspar1791show us your math? Your analysis would need to account for global competition and the need to keep corporations and high value individuals with incentives, then their earnings and purchases from earnings can be taxed. You may be onto something, but your analysis typically leads to corporations and individuals fleeing and actually reduces tax base. Look at Malaysia corporate tax for a recent example. It basically boils down to game theory maths

    • @karakaspar1791
      @karakaspar1791 Месяц назад

      @@TheDuckofDoom. thats fair lol I only mentioned my credentials because you mentioned education. But I suppose you’re right. But no, Accounting is applied economics. It’s directly related. I’m a tax accountant so my job is unquestionably a mixture of both. I’d be happy to explain my thoughts if you would indulge me! Here it goes lol
      If we’re talking about inflation in the context of it being a problem then it should follow that what we are talking about is an unsustainable cpi when wages don’t keep pace with inflation. Inflation is a good thing when wages and wealth accumulation increase at a relatively similar rate. Right now where at Great Depression ratios.
      What you said is right but your line of thinking stops before its logical conclusion. Follow the money. So the government prints more money to stimulate the economy and disperses it in various ways (increasing salaries of police officers/teachers/usps workers, creating infrastructure jobs, investing in medical/environmental research, small business loans). Then, in a healthy economy with proper corporate and antitrust regulations, the money would provide working class consumers with more buying power leading to a more favorable cpi. Once the money is spent, leverage to shifts the owning class. Then it would be taxed back to the us treasury to be reinvested into the economy again. Everyone gets wealthier and the country becomes a nicer place to live. Inflation increases bc everyone’s wealth increases meaning that the value of the US dollar increased.
      PROBLEM IS… we do not have proper antitrust regulations and too many people are living paycheck to paycheck 😅 soooo when the money is spent it goes straight to the retained earnings of corporations aka to the shareholders stock portfolio. Which would be all fine and good if the majority of the stock market wasn’t owned and controlled by such a small number of untra rich people who also are coincidentally ceos of the very same monopolies
      Once these people reach a certain threshold of wealth, they have no incentive to care about cpi because they have such few competitors because they have made barriers to entry entirely insurmountable without extreme luck. Supply and demand goes out the window when you have unlimited supply. Artificial scarcity is entirely in their power.
      None of this is arbitrary. If you or your parent/grandparent’s net worth is below about $10 million, you are a working class consumer. Over 10m are an owning class “producer” but trust me…. They usually do not produce anything, I’ve been working 70hour weeks for the last month preparing their tax returns. You go to work for a paycheck and then pay taxes on your earnings. Then you spend it or it goes into your 401k which you draw from in retirement. For them, they do not ever have to touch their wealth. You get taxes on your equity (property taxes) but people with large amounts of wealth will see their net worth grow by millions in a single year and it goes completely untaxed. Then it just keeps growing and growing leading to inflation. Not the good kind like I explained above. The bad kind that actually devalues the US currency and makes the cpi unrealistic for most people. Then they can’t afford necessities and turn to crime, get put in prison, and then create a cycle of generational poverty
      Sorry for the novel lol I literally cannot stop myself 😂

  • @scotts6157
    @scotts6157 Месяц назад +21

    Some things were just meant for each other like Reason and Andrew, greed and free markets, President Biden and retirement homes.

  • @caeserromero3013
    @caeserromero3013 Месяц назад +5

    There was another factor of inflation not mentioned. Energy policy. Make energy more expensive, production and transport costs rise, which increases consumer prices.

  • @THATMOFODIRT
    @THATMOFODIRT Месяц назад +9

    I love how politicians lambast big corporations like those same big corporations aren’t the ones funding their political campaigns 😂

    • @johnsmithers8913
      @johnsmithers8913 Месяц назад +4

      This. I bet that politicians phone up their corporate donors prior to a speech like this and say don't worry, "We still love you, and by the way, we will make that modification to the Bill that you wanted. No bad feelings, it's just politics, you know".

  • @kittenzrulz2314
    @kittenzrulz2314 Месяц назад +3

    This still fundamentally ignores how many businesses especially grocery stores increase their prices far beyond inflation.

    • @filster1934
      @filster1934 Месяц назад +1

      Ummm, grocery stores have, quite possibly, the lowest profit margins in the economy, 2.2%.

  • @AaronMichaelLong
    @AaronMichaelLong Месяц назад +2

    Corporations are so greedy, they completely forgot to hike prices for, like, 30 years, between 1991 and 2021.

  • @Norman_Fleming
    @Norman_Fleming Месяц назад +16

    What an excellent mix of information and hilarity.

  • @sarysa
    @sarysa Месяц назад +6

    On one hand, shrinkflation is a legitimate nuisance and so deceptive. I'm a nerd who has memorized most of my favorite products' net weights and I've still gotten punked from time to time.
    On the other hand, good luck legislating it away without either a ton of loopholes or an overbearing list of regulations.

    • @johnsmithers8913
      @johnsmithers8913 Месяц назад +1

      It's a nuisance, but is it deceptive? Maybe the first time someone buys a product, but we all start relating our satisfaction to cost.
      In the end, consumers look at the weight they are getting from competitive products to make their decisions.

  • @hydraulichydra8363
    @hydraulichydra8363 Месяц назад +3

    It's time to crack down on _GOVERNMENT_-GREED-FLATION_

  • @6point5
    @6point5 Месяц назад +7

    And here i've been ordering coffee wrong this entire time.

  • @arpoky
    @arpoky Месяц назад +4

    My beef with the corporations is that they make the standard size smaller, and label the original as "family size." It is gaslighting, but thats just how marketing works. The government needs to stop printing money and get this shit under control.

  • @Furluge
    @Furluge Месяц назад +2

    "INFLATION"
    "It's just inflation"
    OMG that had me rolling.

  • @MissLibertarian
    @MissLibertarian Месяц назад +11

    Yes, greed causes shrinkflation; people greedy for chips buy them despite being poor nutritionally, higher cost, and smaller servings. If nobody bought them, no retailer would waste shelf space and cost to stock them and suppliers would stop shipping them, and producers stop making them. Duh.
    Every supplier just wants a happy customer and does their best to offer them an acceptable product at a price they are willing to pay.

  • @Juventinos
    @Juventinos Месяц назад +32

    unreal how many people think this. unreal. another stupid thing is: record profits...
    I'm sure in Venezuela where they add another 0 to the money every day the corporations have record profits every day

    • @starkillersneed
      @starkillersneed Месяц назад +8

      Obviously the average Venezuelan corporation is 100 times greedier than Disney or Apple

    • @OmegaTou
      @OmegaTou Месяц назад +16

      Yeah, I noticed how all the "record profits" were in nominal terms, not percentages. So the "record profits" are actually just another example of the effects of inflation.

    • @eldrago19
      @eldrago19 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@OmegaTouthere is actually a graph in this video at 5:17 showing after tax profits propositional to GDP. On this graph they are higher than they've been since 1947. Hope it helps.

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад +6

      @@OmegaTou The video actually did pretty poor job of explaining the effect of pent up demand and stimulous money, and any reasonable business adjusting prices in anticipation of the market effects of inflation rather than strictly syncronized with it.

    • @OmegaTou
      @OmegaTou Месяц назад +5

      @@eldrago19 except that inflation had been consistently understated for decades. One consequence of understating inflation, is overstating GDP, so I highly doubt that graph is accurate to reality.

  • @MG-je5xq
    @MG-je5xq Месяц назад +10

    You guys make such fun videos. I am truly thankful!!

  • @filster1934
    @filster1934 Месяц назад +1

    THANK YOU FOR THIS!! Sadly, Americans are too clueless to grasp the concept.

  • @pkonneker
    @pkonneker Месяц назад +3

    Ah yes the classic sun tzu tactic. “If people notice your crap economy blame rich people and/or corporations.”

  • @MarcPagan
    @MarcPagan Месяц назад +21

    In a more perfect world,
    to vote, a grade of 85% or better on an Econ101 final would be required.
    Bonus requirement -
    Require an 80% or better on a Stats 101 final.
    Thereby making at actually possible for the average person to decern select valid claims of politicians, from lies, or perhaps worse, stupidity. Hi AOC!!

    • @douglaslucas2155
      @douglaslucas2155 Месяц назад +5

      ... and a test on the Federalist Papers.

    • @eldrago19
      @eldrago19 Месяц назад +1

      Though with that grade, you'd know Reason has completely misunderstood what a profit margin is (it doesn't rise when people just spend more stuff because it is proportional to revenue).

    • @MarcPagan
      @MarcPagan Месяц назад +5

      @@eldrago19 Gee you're tough :)
      OK, OK.
      Add that a grade of 95% or better,
      and a dissertation of Hazlitt's evisceration of Keynesian Economics,
      is required to hold Federal Office, including to hold a Senate seat, or judgeship.

    • @grantjohnson4810
      @grantjohnson4810 Месяц назад +2

      Getting rid of poll taxes and landownership requirements was fine. But a basic intelligence test really should be required to vote. Tbh, this is the reason some of our best citizens are the legal migrants who become naturalized citizens... they had to work for it and prove their worth.
      Our Founding Fathers knew the folly of hereditary rule. They would be ashamed to see what the recipients of their sweat, blood, and tears have done with their great gift.

    • @natesytacct
      @natesytacct Месяц назад +1

      The implausibility of that is why we were created as a republic. Our lives are not meant to be subservient to the will of the majority.

  • @notme222
    @notme222 Месяц назад +4

    There's an excellent episode of The Political Oprhanage called "What Skinny Dipping Taught Me About Greed". If you want more Heaton (and who doesn't?) it's a great listen.

  • @techguy651
    @techguy651 Месяц назад +3

    I mean both can be right. As a few companies in an industry increase their prices because of increased costs, others look around and say, “well their customers are still buying at that price so we can raise our prices too,” and because lots of industries have gotten more centralized since the last recession, there’s no competition to swoop in and get the price back down.

    • @benjamindover4337
      @benjamindover4337 Месяц назад +1

      Exactly. It's bizarre that this guy has gone all in on denying this. These companies are enjoying monopoly pricing powers and have no interest in increasing supply, which would only demish profits.

    • @natesytacct
      @natesytacct Месяц назад

      @@benjamindover4337 you and @techguy651 might want to rewatch 3:49 - 4:33

    • @theotherguy6951
      @theotherguy6951 Месяц назад +1

      Companies can only effectively charge ‘monopoly’ prices if the government is actively restricting (if not outright blocking) the entry of competitors through exclusive grants, patents, special regulatory privileges, or tariffs and quotas.
      If we want more competition, the government needs to stop granting monopoly privileges and leave the free market to its own devices.

  • @charliegordon-qh2ll
    @charliegordon-qh2ll Месяц назад +13

    This isn't anything new. I was complaining about shrinkflation when I was a kid in the 80's and early 90's. This isn't new.

    • @hismajesty6272
      @hismajesty6272 Месяц назад +1

      And as a conservative I completely agree with the Shrinkflation ban. It’s been too long.

  • @Jesse-km4sm
    @Jesse-km4sm Месяц назад +1

    It’s always a treat to see Andrew on reason

  • @MissLibertarian
    @MissLibertarian Месяц назад +11

    I love greed karma: where greedy suppliers meet greedy consumers and they negotiate prices. I especially like how very greedy suppliers try to price-gouge during emergencies, and find no takers except for the greediest buyers. It’s retail karma! If they misjudge greed, they have to drop prices for the less greedy. If that were illegal greedy sellers and buyers would deal under the table. A system based on greed is what causes people to work so hard to earn, spend, and produce, as well as sell. Greed for something else than what they have.
    Envy, however, should not be allowed to vote, except with their own money.

    • @wheel-man5319
      @wheel-man5319 Месяц назад

      Yet the whole of the Democrat party seems to always run on envy. And the stupid party seems to follow them as if they were shackled together.

  • @benjaminlehman3221
    @benjaminlehman3221 Месяц назад +1

    I think we should also regulate size of packaging. No packaging can be more than 10% of the object it is holding. Potato chips are 70% air in the bag

  • @micaiahgrossmann8058
    @micaiahgrossmann8058 Месяц назад +1

    When all hope seemed lost, Heaton returned to save us with dry humor and basic economics.

  • @erikwiseman1702
    @erikwiseman1702 Месяц назад +1

    Yessssssss, I need more Andrew Heaton! Never shrinkflate Heaton!

  • @kennethfharkin
    @kennethfharkin Месяц назад +2

    Shrinkflation also in the end bites companies in the ass. I want to be clear the costs are going up and must be accounted for BUT those companies which address this via shrinkflation damage their brand. When their brand is a zero quality brand anyway and based solely on price then it does not matter but when any level of quality is associated with the brand it is the start of the death march.
    When I see prices go up I will grumble but I will also make certain when I spend my money I am getting the quality I demand. When a company decides to cannibalize their quality/value to stay cheap then they will lose the consumers who care about quality. Friendly's, the restaurant chain, has been learning this the hard way as they have consistently reduced portions and quality for well over a decade to maintain price and now NOBODY wants to go there because it simply isn't worth it for what you get.

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад +2

      It also damages economy of scale and any end uses like recipes that have been built on a standard sales unit of the product. I buy the one pound container because I need one pound not 14 ounces. The price per pound/ounce is also a consideration, but the total sticker cost is almost irrelevent. Though I can look around and see that I am in a minority.

  • @notmuch_23
    @notmuch_23 Месяц назад +3

    Thing is with this inflation, there are a greater amount of dollars chasing the same amount of goods, but hardly any of those increased amount of dollars are going into the hands of ordinary people, _by government design!_

    • @cmdrfunk
      @cmdrfunk Месяц назад

      The second half of what you said contradicts the first.

    • @notmuch_23
      @notmuch_23 Месяц назад +2

      How?

  • @TheBoringVoice
    @TheBoringVoice Месяц назад +1

    Finally a plebian level explanation for all of us workers. So simple not even the politicians understand it.

  • @NickDrinksWater
    @NickDrinksWater Месяц назад +1

    I remember when fruit by the foot felt like an actual foot, now it feels like a couple inches

  • @Srode1999
    @Srode1999 Месяц назад +1

    You forgot about cost push inflation. Rising fuel prices, government mandated wage increases, and such things also contribute to inflation.

  • @robanson32
    @robanson32 Месяц назад

    Honestly probably your best work so far, kudos heaton

  • @bebop_557
    @bebop_557 Месяц назад

    Replacing regular eggs with quail eggs is something I would absolutely expect to happen in Austin, TX.

  • @Terminarch
    @Terminarch Месяц назад

    It was such a wild ride the day I understood that supply & demand also applies to our dollars...

  • @rosgill6
    @rosgill6 Месяц назад

    Always good to see Andrew!

  • @guga5708156
    @guga5708156 Месяц назад +1

    TLDR: Its inflation, but some instead of increasing cost reduce the size of the product.

  • @bertblue9683
    @bertblue9683 Месяц назад +1

    Remember not long ago, when all coffee was sold in one pound bags. Then 12 ounces, and now 10 is just as common as 12.
    It's not corporate greed. It political greed.

  • @adamanhavengarde
    @adamanhavengarde Месяц назад

    glad to see another video about basic economics. most people still don't understand it.

  • @d.schmidt9990
    @d.schmidt9990 Месяц назад +1

    Any manufacturer that uses automation just can't change the size of their package or container. To do this may require expensive retooling. In the short term it may be more economical to keep the package and put less in it and change the stated weight.

  • @deathbykungfu
    @deathbykungfu Месяц назад

    I like how you took "I slept in my suit and haven't looked in a mirror today" and made it your brand

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Месяц назад +1

    So, if a company still makes a quart of ice cream just like they used to are they not going to be allowed to also sell a 1.5 pint Ice cream in it's new "convenience" size? It's stupid.
    It's almost like politicians don't actually care about anything other than the message to voters.

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki Месяц назад +1

      Could come with a warning label: "Inflation-General's warning: this product could be less than what you'd expect." 😂

    • @Scoots1994
      @Scoots1994 Месяц назад +2

      @@Kaede-Sasaki Could put that label on the money too.

  • @gscurd75
    @gscurd75 Месяц назад

    “The first lesson of economics is scarcity: There is never enough of anything to satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics.” Thomas Sowell

  • @michaellavoice3807
    @michaellavoice3807 Месяц назад

    Why doesn't this guy have more videos? This is great!

  • @Monsuco
    @Monsuco Месяц назад

    Prices are rising for other government-caused reasons as well. For example here in Colorado the price of eggs has soared because our legislature decided to mandate that all eggs sold in Colorado be free range. This is because our legislature values chickens more than residents of this state.

  • @caeserromero3013
    @caeserromero3013 Месяц назад +2

    And they call other people ‘Conspiracy theorists’ 😂

  • @2ndAttemptPOG
    @2ndAttemptPOG Месяц назад

    This reminds me of that Mostly Weekly Series. LOVE IT :D

  • @oblonghas
    @oblonghas Месяц назад

    The example of television prices is a good one

  • @harmonk8012
    @harmonk8012 Месяц назад

    The explanation is so simple, even I can understand.

  • @servicerockveterinarian4349
    @servicerockveterinarian4349 Месяц назад +1

    There isn't enough competition. And the government has allowed too many mergers and acquisitions. And it's too hard to start new businesses. Big companies are taking advantage of the situation.

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki Месяц назад

      And 3 companies: Black Rock, State Street, and Vanguard have shares in most businesses, including competitor businesses. As such, there is collaboration instead of more competition.

  • @peregrintook9227
    @peregrintook9227 Месяц назад +10

    There are a lot of angry comments here using the same flawed logic. "How dare you defend greedy corporations! You just want poor people to suffer!" Economics is more complex than rich vs poor. We have to think about what actually works in terms of alleviating poverty (everyone wants to help the poor. No one actually wants the rich to become richer). Insults and slogans aren't useful. If you have a problem with this video, please use logic to explain your position.

    • @Great_Wall_of_Text
      @Great_Wall_of_Text Месяц назад

      While I agree with the general sentiment, I think there are plenty of wealthy people who do not give so much as a single shit about poor people, and definitely want rich people (i.e. themselves) to get richer at the expense of everybody else.
      That mindset is a great way to get rich.
      Greed, as the video says, is a real thing that remains constant as gravity.
      That said, we live in a system that is *supposed to balance greed with logic, and mostly does.

    • @mjg407
      @mjg407 Месяц назад +1

      The angry replies are by the folks who are economically ignorant. They are the same people who claim the rich don’t pay their fair share of taxes. It’s an emotional response, without facts or logic. They would also argue that income inequality is bad, while ignoring talent and effort inequality. You are spot on in that we as a society should eliminate poverty. As pointed out in the video, the price of a television has dropped significantly while quality has increased, so now even those defined as poor own one.

  • @sounghungi
    @sounghungi Месяц назад

    Kind of weird how these companies that are always trying to maximize their profits didn't do this before.
    It's almost like they want to sell things as cheaply as they can so they can move large volumes for more profits than smaller volumes.

  • @leisurelane1
    @leisurelane1 Месяц назад

    This is the first time I’ve ever seen this guy in a video and I cannot get enough!

  • @Monkey-fv2km
    @Monkey-fv2km Месяц назад +1

    People who work for corporations and buy things from corporations wanting to pay less whilst getting paid more...there is an argument there that greed in corporations is the cause, if you see corporations as a collection of humans trying to make a living.

  • @BobBlairSmith
    @BobBlairSmith Месяц назад

    Welcome back to Reason Mostly Every 6 Years, HEATON!

  • @buriedunborn
    @buriedunborn Месяц назад

    I can't believe that, in 2024, we still need to explain what the fuck inflation is and how it works.

  • @infinitexps
    @infinitexps Месяц назад +48

    Companies are doing Americans a favor. Most need to go on a diet anyway.

    • @armadillolover99
      @armadillolover99 Месяц назад +5

      Can confirm, I lost 60 lbs during “shrinkflation”. Coincidence? I think not!

    • @Tufhhuyy
      @Tufhhuyy Месяц назад +4

      Can confirm, currently barely able to afford food and losing weight because of it

    • @TheJinashura
      @TheJinashura Месяц назад

      @@Tufhhuyy Cmon man! That is just the bidenomics' universal health care plan at work , jack!

    • @SepticFuddy
      @SepticFuddy Месяц назад +6

      Ah yes, the classic "Maduro diet"

  • @dsg325
    @dsg325 Месяц назад

    I think Hershey used to sell candy bars for a nickel. The size of the bar would change but it remained a nickel.

  • @PaladinStem
    @PaladinStem Месяц назад +1

    The Hershey nickel bar isn’t around anymore for a reason.

    • @davidanalyst671
      @davidanalyst671 Месяц назад

      because when you hand someone a nickel, you are handing over more value than 5 cents worth

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki Месяц назад

      And three musketeers doesn't have the other 2 musketeers in it either (vanilla & strawberry). WW2! 😡

  • @JustAGuyYaKnow42
    @JustAGuyYaKnow42 Месяц назад

    Duh. It is the same reason we pay more than any other industrialized nation for healthcare and our life expectancy is dropping.

  • @cruisr3k
    @cruisr3k Месяц назад

    You teased a video idea about concentrated corporate power and anti-trust laws. I'd really like to see that.

  • @jeremy8407
    @jeremy8407 Месяц назад

    Andrew Heaton is the main reason for Reason to exist

  • @pointerdogmarketing2197
    @pointerdogmarketing2197 16 дней назад

    Prices and wages are sticky in the down direction: if inflation raises prices, the prices won't go down even if cost go down.

  • @amandaarmstrong3606
    @amandaarmstrong3606 Месяц назад +1

    Heaton is an absolute gem

  • @bvoyelr
    @bvoyelr Месяц назад +1

    I'm not sure you made a strong rebuttal to the final argument: record high profit margins. If margins are, in fact, higher than usual, that suggests that they DID raise prices more than they need to (unless they're in some kind of industry where most of the costs are fixed). If just raw profits are hitting records, then your argument works: more commerce = more dollars made.

  • @dmhiix
    @dmhiix Месяц назад +1

    The corporations are making more profit in money that is worth less.

  • @funtechu
    @funtechu Месяц назад +1

    Two important clarifications because I feel like this video, while reaching the correct conclusion, fails to properly represent or understand the opposing view.
    1. With respect to "greedflation", the assumption isn't that greed has increased, rather that greed has remained the same, but companies are taking advantage of the fact that consumers are expecting inflation to increase prices more than is needed to offset their costs. In economic term, the high inflation environment typically reduces the price elasticity of demand (because consumers expect prices to increase, and don't know how much of an increase to expect), and thus prices rise more than just the costs. The term "greedflation" is a bit of a misnomer because it's not so much driven by "greed" but rather by the market responding over time to the change is PEoD.
    2. With respect to increased corporate profit margins, there is a difference between "increased profits" and "increased profit margins". I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that this wasn't done on purpose to mislead, and instead attempt to clarify for your edification. Profit margin is the percentage of each dollar of revenue that is profit - i.e. the amount left over after costs are taken out, while profit is the sum of the amount left over. For example, if a bag of chips costs $2 to make and sells for $5, the profit is $3, and the profit margin is 60%. Regardless of how many bags of chips are sold at this point, the profit margin stays the same, but the profits will increase or decrease with the quantity sold. If the cost of the chips then increases to $3 and the price increases to $8, then the profit margin is now 62.5% which means that the company is making more on each bag of chips - the profit *margin* increased.
    In business it's a bit more complex because there are both fixed and variable costs, so we break down the profit margins into two components - gross margin which is the profit margin after accounting for the costs of good sold, and operating margin which is the profit margin after accounting for everything else. When people say that profit margins are increasing, they mean that gross margin, or operating margin is increasing, or both are increasing. Now, here's the key point - since gross margin only factors in the costs of goods sold, then in general it stays about the same regardless of quantity. However operating margin effectively ameliorates fixed costs over all units sold, so in general, for a given gross margin, increasing the quantity sold will increase the operating margin, even if the price stays the same. So if operating margin is increasing, then it doesn't say whether increased prices above cost factor it, while if gross margin is increasing, it does imply that the company is increasing prices above the increase in their costs. So which are actually increasing in companies at this time? The answer is that both operating margin and gross margin are increasing, hence people's accusation of "greedflation".
    Now given that this "greedflation" is occurring, is the solution big government getting in and doing price fixing? Absolutely not! The only thing that will temper these price increases is consumer behavior changes that increase the price elasticity of demand. If you keep buying something regardless of how high the price goes, why should the company lower the price? You are clearly willing to pay the higher price.

  • @agoogleaccount2861
    @agoogleaccount2861 Месяц назад

    Record layoffs and price increases. But also somehow posting record profits ..ask yourself .. how are BOTH possible simultaneously ?! Aren't they mutually exclusive of each other ? ..

  • @ebolachanislove6072
    @ebolachanislove6072 Месяц назад

    I work at a store and the tool I use to print out the price label tells me how much the item costs the store and uh . . . it's not been going up.

  • @Greef246
    @Greef246 Месяц назад

    This channel must of been hearing me argue with my coworker. When he said it all i could think of its just normal inflation and i was so confused by him

  • @SpareSimian
    @SpareSimian Месяц назад

    I'm reminded of the lemon rant in Portal 2.

  • @MrOsprey104
    @MrOsprey104 Месяц назад +1

    Oh god, the photo of brand logos. What is this? 2008?

  • @robertanderson5092
    @robertanderson5092 Месяц назад

    This deserves a Remy song

  • @AndrewJFO
    @AndrewJFO Месяц назад

    I appreciate the argument, and that directly addressing shrinkflation is a band-aid response that fails to treat the wound. But a conversation needs to be had about mega-corporations (Unilever, Nestle, PepsiCo, Proctor & Gamble, etc.) and atrophied anti-trust legislation, not a throw-away line at the end of the video which actually would give credence to the accusation of greed. They aren't wrong about the underlying cause, it is greed, but specifically it is greed that isn't hampered by effective competition.

  • @N19htcat
    @N19htcat Месяц назад +1

    Oh no, poor corporations, poor businesses always being on edge of the cliff, always being in danger of bankruptcy😢
    I am not saying that government also isn't greedy.
    So, the people, working class were always alone in the struggle. When people just side with either corporations or the government - it's stupid. They are playing you. And they are BOTH to blame, because people in power are just greedy, whether it's corporation or the government.

  • @Daniel-ob2ml
    @Daniel-ob2ml Месяц назад

    Shrinkflation has been going on for a long time. In the 70s, a normal bag of potato chips was 16 oz. In the 80s, it was 14 oz. Now it is 9 1/2 oz, and the "party size" bag is 16 oz.

  • @MikeInOregon
    @MikeInOregon Месяц назад

    People insulated from the people they screw over is the problem with everything.
    It’s harder to cheat and steal when your victims can get to you and administer justice without government interference.

  • @jasonhutchins9239
    @jasonhutchins9239 Месяц назад

    Its more price manipulation your talking about. As a carpenter i like when all the companies around me raise their rates. The person who doesnt will get looked down upon.

  • @brendaechols5929
    @brendaechols5929 Месяц назад

    Well it's not the consumer. They seal the packages the items.

  • @felixjohnson3874
    @felixjohnson3874 Месяц назад +1

    This was legitimately just an imsanely simple and concise breakdown of a concept most people tend to not understand.
    Ironically enough, capitalism as a system relies and promotes empathy a ton, because it requires having a good mental model of what other people want and how they behave. (Yes, it also disproportionately favours people with sociopathic/psychopathic tendencies, but those aren't what the majority of people think they are. The successful CEO knows what people want and doesn't let their own internal biases affect that, i.e. good theory of mind, high dissociation) The great irony is that most crystal collar CEO's have a much deeper and more honest understanding of their consumers than vice versa, because their job depends on it and the consumer's doesn't. Most consumers literally never need to ask "hey, if I were in that situation what would I do? Is this action actually unreasonable, or do I just not like it because its hurting me?" because its just not a part of their job or life.
    Is it kinda shitty that companies 'shrinkflate'? Yeah, kinda, but they still say exactly how many Oz you're getting on the box and its not like its unnoticable either, so at worst you're getting a couple % less value than you think until you notice it and either are okay with it, *_or stop buying it._* The main difference between 'shrinkflation' and inflation is one asks for consent, and the money printers go brrrrrrrr

  • @connerymartin2952
    @connerymartin2952 Месяц назад

    Shrinkflation has made it easier for me to budget as a one person household and not eat as much crap or waste half the bag of something.

  • @quietchris3325
    @quietchris3325 Месяц назад

    I need more data from the Heaton Institute of Unsuspicious Activity can you link me to their website?