Why are UK Food Prices so High? (and is it Brexit?)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
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    It wasn't long ago when the UK had one of the lowest food prices in Europe - but following the pandemic, the cost of food has risen dramatically. In this video, we examine the impact of higher input costs - but could it all just be connected to Brexit?
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    /////////////////////////////////////
    1 - / 1
    2 - news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/euro...
    3 - landgeist.com/2021/04/06/prev...
    4 - ourworldindata.org/grapher/co...
    5 - tradingeconomics.com/united-k...
    6 - tradingeconomics.com/euro-are...
    7 - www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflat...
    8 - www.ft.com/content/41c8b19d-c...
    9 - www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...
    10 - www.ft.com/content/d4677b1e-6...
    11 - www.ft.com/content/41c8b19d-c...
    12 - www.politicshome.com/news/art...
    13 - www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflat...
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:51 - History and Comparison
    04:03 - Why is Food Getting So Expensive?
    05:12 - Is It Brexit?
    07:14 - Brilliant

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @avaevathornton9851
    @avaevathornton9851 11 месяцев назад +416

    The fact we had such low food prices to begin with is really surprising given we're a net food importer.

    • @JonyTony2018
      @JonyTony2018 11 месяцев назад +105

      Because we had a very competitive food market, thanks to being in the EU.

    • @jim-es8qk
      @jim-es8qk 11 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@JonyTony2018no, thanks to the supermarkets.

    • @raymccrae
      @raymccrae 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@jim-es8qk did supermarkets disappear with Brexit? No, we still have supermarkets and spiralling food costs, so clearly it isn't the supermarkets that are the factor. Perhaps if you'd kept your uninformed gammon opinions to yourself, we'd all be in a better position.

    • @EamonnMooney
      @EamonnMooney 11 месяцев назад +48

      @@JonyTony2018 That doesn't explain why our food was significantly cheaper than the EU. I've always been staggered by the high cost of food in France, Germany and the US whenever I visit.

    • @micallef87
      @micallef87 11 месяцев назад +16

      @@JonyTony2018how would that be the reason if we were the cheapest in Europe?

  • @HobbyHut01
    @HobbyHut01 11 месяцев назад +197

    Every week I do a food shop and I notice 99.9% of prices creep up every week by 5p all the way to 75p or shops are charging the same but reduce the package size such as chicken breast ect

    • @Kj16V
      @Kj16V 11 месяцев назад +5

      Yep. Over the last 7 years or so our weekly food shop-up has gone from About £45, to £50, to £70.

    • @markallen6284
      @markallen6284 11 месяцев назад +9

      Big Tesco in Leith no longer stocks a dozen eggs, only half-dozens. That really set me off

    • @HobbyHut01
      @HobbyHut01 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@markallen6284 that’s just shameful mind, country has gone to the dogs

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah. Like 1 2ltr bottle of spring water (basic own brand) at the local Spar was costing 80p; then it was 89p; then it was 95p! 😏 B___y WATER!!

    • @tommysawyer9680
      @tommysawyer9680 11 месяцев назад +3

      shrinkflation.
      same price smaller package size or weight.

  • @pavelcistjakov243
    @pavelcistjakov243 10 месяцев назад +16

    As my economics lecturer said in 2008, "We are currently living through historic times. They are both very scary and fascinating at the same time"

  • @mdb4michele
    @mdb4michele 11 месяцев назад +16

    Marie Antoinette would say "let them eat sovereignty "

  • @Splooshua.
    @Splooshua. 11 месяцев назад +392

    Supermarkets upping prices cause they can get away with it is also a big factor

    • @AutisticCumsock
      @AutisticCumsock 11 месяцев назад +31

      Exactly, corporations will price gouge if they think they can get away with it

    • @alexhunter672
      @alexhunter672 11 месяцев назад +9

      Supermarkets don't wholly control prices. Their suppliers have a much greater impact on long-term price. So, if you're paying more for things, it isn't the supermarkets. Many of the largest suppliers of food in the UK are now making higher profits than ever. Supermarket profits are all largely down.

    • @flashbaggins427
      @flashbaggins427 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@alexhunter672 A large number of people don't realise that the profit margins for supermarkets are surprisingly low, they aren't like Shell or BP gouging oil prices

    • @tt-ew7rx
      @tt-ew7rx 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's more a case of their not being able to get away with not upping prices. They are not charities.

    • @sueyourself5413
      @sueyourself5413 11 месяцев назад +24

      @@tt-ew7rx Oh the poor CEOs and their profit obligations towards shareholders. How quaint.

  • @HShango
    @HShango 11 месяцев назад +190

    Whoever said a decrease in the UK inflation.... Doesn't mean things will get cheaper

    • @noeyes6151
      @noeyes6151 11 месяцев назад +28

      Things never go back to before👍

    • @Alex-fm5ke
      @Alex-fm5ke 11 месяцев назад +4

      When it comes to food the prices will come down

    • @JK-pe6ft
      @JK-pe6ft 11 месяцев назад +48

      @@Alex-fm5ke Inflation represents the rate of price increases. When inflation reduces (but remains positive), prices still go up but not as fast. You'd need deflation for prices to come down, but that is very unlikely and comes with its own problems.
      There is a difference between prices and inflation. Perhaps we should elect a PM that understands this.

    • @Avalozir
      @Avalozir 11 месяцев назад

      @@JK-pe6ft Rather a PM, who is honest about it. Tory hacks are not exactly the most honest folks out there.

    • @davidmcculloch8490
      @davidmcculloch8490 11 месяцев назад +10

      Whoever said it was correct. A reduction in the rate of inflation means prices increase at a slower rate, but they still increase. The word for falling prices is deflation.

  • @Falney
    @Falney 11 месяцев назад +56

    It's funny you would say that farmers put the price increase on the food when they aren't. The supermarkets are increasing prices without increasing the amount they pay. Farmers are going out of business because supermarkets refuse to pay enough to cover cost of production. I. E. Farmers are running at a loss

    • @bdz_4206
      @bdz_4206 11 месяцев назад

      That's what one might call "Surplus Value"

  • @idraote
    @idraote 11 месяцев назад +11

    Problem is, food prices seldom go down. Once the average price for one kg apples has - let's say - risen to 2,5 Euros, it won't go down by much even if the price for the retailer should drop by 50%

  • @brettsinclaire4007
    @brettsinclaire4007 11 месяцев назад +22

    I've noticed now as well that even shopping at Aldi or Lidl isn't massively different from Sainsbury's or Tesco. My shopping bill for four people has
    gone up and up, in 2020 the average was around £100 including some alcohol, now it's about £160, even though I'm buying the same things.

  • @geeksworkshop
    @geeksworkshop 11 месяцев назад +158

    Some Food has double in price, but everything seems to have gone up at least 50%

    • @The0Yapster
      @The0Yapster 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@Gary-bz1rf How can you do that master.
      I live alone and I spend like the double

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Gary-bz1rf i used to spend around £30 a week on food for one person. Now that's at least £50 a week. i generally buy a lot of fresh fruit and veg as I usually cook from scratch and don't eat much meat. I only have the one supermarket in walking distance and i don't have a car. So I can't even shop around

    • @The0Yapster
      @The0Yapster 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Gary-bz1rf Low carbs diet
      Meat, vegeatbles, rice, nuts, yoghurt, eggs, some microwave dishes etc...
      I'm a 30 years old engineer who has a relatively stressful job. I don't have much time for house shores :(
      I work in research so my salary i shit. I'm looking for ways to save money...

    • @jaycam2886
      @jaycam2886 11 месяцев назад +2

      Some food has trebled Tescos are the worst for this!!!

    • @blablup1214
      @blablup1214 11 месяцев назад +2

      For comparison.
      Me in Germany need about 100€ for food for 2 persons a week. ( I buy a little more high quality ingredients but also not that fancy stuff)
      It has gone up from about 70€ or 80€

  • @Rkucins
    @Rkucins 11 месяцев назад +23

    I am puzzled with the cheapest food in the UK narrative. Anyone shopping in London would hardly agree to that. Especially if they travel in the EU. By no way, it was the cheapest before 2021. Now the picture could be distorted due to different inflationary rates since 2022. How is the AVERAGE food price calculated for the UK? Is this the weighted average? A pensioner in a rural area and a family of 4 in London would spend rather different amounts, and equalising that would hardly make much sense. I do not think comparing the UK average to say Chech or Italian average would also make any sense, not mentioning Poland or Baltics. As such, I am sorry TLDR, but such representation of statistics is rather misleading without context or a deeper look

    • @davidjennings2179
      @davidjennings2179 11 месяцев назад +4

      London wages tend to be higher, I could be on nearly 50% more for the same job in London but I'd actually be worse off because of property, transport and food costs.
      I doubt TLDR gathered this data themselves, they're just repeating the findings from other research.
      Also don't forget that the UK isn't alone in having a higher cost of living for big cities, Paris, Rome and Berlin are all in high demand and have higher prices than the surrounding areas.

    • @adrianrouse5148
      @adrianrouse5148 11 месяцев назад +1

      Also different models used in different country's. So comparing country's inflation figures is not easy. .. it will be interesting to see supermarket profits. The prices from farmers is not always passed on. Look at the egg shortage due to supermarkets not paying what it costs to produce. The visa system for seasonal workers is a UK cock up. Far to complicated. But to say it's Brexit is incorrect.

  • @wojrej777
    @wojrej777 11 месяцев назад +142

    • @wojrej777
      @wojrej777 11 месяцев назад

      @win_signal247 THAT IS HIS USER NAME..

    • @wojrej777
      @wojrej777 11 месяцев назад

      he's active on TELEGRAMS with the name above..

  • @theplasmatron3306
    @theplasmatron3306 10 месяцев назад +5

    I'm not in the uk, but it's scary to see how there can be a domino effect making everything almost anywhere too expensive to live off of, it's stupidly expensive to make a living . It's like the 2020s are a warning.

  • @ricardophdddsmd
    @ricardophdddsmd 11 месяцев назад +26

    As someone who was planning to work in the UK in 2024, but now I changed my mind.

    • @alwaysdisputin9930
      @alwaysdisputin9930 11 месяцев назад

      It's the right wing's cunning plan to stop immigration = make Britain incredibly shit so that nobody wants to come here.

    • @2dradon2
      @2dradon2 11 месяцев назад +8

      Yeah I dont blame you. Me and my partner are currently looking at moving out the UK. Wages for our kind of work are far higher in other countries anyway but it just keeps getting worse.

    • @rt-viz954
      @rt-viz954 11 месяцев назад +8

      Honestly unless you are coming from a really poor country don't bother

    • @healthiswealth6797
      @healthiswealth6797 11 месяцев назад

      UK is a dump now!! Not even safe to walk the streets

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 9 месяцев назад

      Absolutely no reason to feel like that

  • @als_pals
    @als_pals 11 месяцев назад +49

    People realised they can price gouge our basic needs

    • @noeyes6151
      @noeyes6151 11 месяцев назад

      Pretty much

    • @Sanutep
      @Sanutep 11 месяцев назад

      So evil.

    • @dww6
      @dww6 11 месяцев назад +1

      Have you ever tried to raise livestock?

    • @pr0fess0rbadass
      @pr0fess0rbadass 11 месяцев назад

      America style

    • @dww6
      @dww6 11 месяцев назад

      @@jabezhane not really because there is a increase in risk.

  • @charliecrome207
    @charliecrome207 11 месяцев назад +10

    The left/right divide is so stupid, if a policy is clearly having a negative effect they should just switch to something that works rather than sticking to what their party is known for

  • @pratosaurusrex1128
    @pratosaurusrex1128 11 месяцев назад +81

    6:03 who is the government trying to kid? Latest net migration figures to the U.K. are around 600,000. People who care about immigration are going to be angry regardless of whether they grant visas to meet demand or not.
    Might as well go ahead and grant more visas for a purpose that will help the U.K..

    • @GreenBlueWalkthrough
      @GreenBlueWalkthrough 11 месяцев назад +11

      Also visas are not immigration in the sligfhtest...

    • @_barncat
      @_barncat 11 месяцев назад +2

      just say you're a north african ukrainian syrian albanian refugee and you're in !

    • @pratosaurusrex1128
      @pratosaurusrex1128 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@GreenBlueWalkthrough while migration and granting visas are not the same thing temporary visas (like what is being described in the video) are closer to migration, as you have to leave U.K. before you apply for another visa.

    • @GaganSingh-nx2yv
      @GaganSingh-nx2yv 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@_barncat economic migrants usually fill labour shortages.

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 11 месяцев назад +4

      "People who care about immigration are going to be angry" regardless of anything, basically.

  • @adenmall7596
    @adenmall7596 11 месяцев назад +304

    I'm from the UK and all of what's been said is true. People are going through tough times and there is a difficult winter ahead. The biggest problem here is the gas and electric bill's have gone up 400% . Will be sharing this video with friends and families to help them realize and prepare. With inflation currently at about 10%, my primary concern is how to maximize my savings/retirement fund of about £300k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains.

    • @africanboi4542
      @africanboi4542 11 месяцев назад +4

      I'm sure the idea of a Invstment-Adviser might sound controversial to a few, but a new study by investopedia found out that demand for Invstment-Managers sky-rocketed by over 41.8% since the pandemic and based on firsthand encounter I can say for certain their skillsets are topnotch. I've raised over CAD580k within 18months from an initially stagnant portfoli0 worth CAD150K which was devoid of dividend stocks. These are the high-volume traderss.

    • @selenajack2036
      @selenajack2036 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@africanboi4542 That's impressive! I could really use the expertise of this advisor, my portfolio has been down bad.... Who’s the person guiding you?

    • @lucianoboccedi
      @lucianoboccedi 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@africanboi4542 hanks for this tip. Her website popped up on the first page immediately I searched her, I read through her resume and it seems pretty tight. So, I dropped a message & hopefully she replies soon.

    • @olibob203
      @olibob203 11 месяцев назад +1

      Raisen uk have high interest savings

    • @Lando-kx6so
      @Lando-kx6so 11 месяцев назад +1

      Inflation's at 8.7%

  • @cstephen98
    @cstephen98 11 месяцев назад +8

    I doubt companies will lower their prices unless the government makes them. Companies will never lower prices after raising them of their own free will. If people get used to and adjust to the higher prices the company will pocket the additional profits when their prices go down. I bet they come back in a few months with a promise not to 'raise' prices any higher (as their coats go down) or they'll practice 'shrinkflation' by leaving or even lowering prices but shrinking the container sizes.

  • @banditalley9592
    @banditalley9592 11 месяцев назад +16

    In Romania, a 2 litre bottle of Pepsi is £1.34, in Sainsburys in the UK it is £2.15. Even if inflation was 5% in the UK and 10% in Romania (which it isn't!), the cost in the UK would then be £2,26 or there abouts and in Romania it would be £1.47
    People need to understand that whatever the government says about falling inflation, it still means products that are more expensive in the UK are going to increase massively because of their starting price and remain higher than those in the EU where the prices were lower despite possibly higher inflation.

    • @jaysimpson6857
      @jaysimpson6857 11 месяцев назад +4

      Understanding PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) has helped me understand how dishonest economics is, especially when they compare the U.K. economy against other countries.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jaysimpson6857Explain it to us please!! 🙂

    • @jaysimpson6857
      @jaysimpson6857 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@oneoflokis A basic example is to compare or rate the economic situation of two countries and their citizens without considering PPP. This often gives the false impression that the citizens of the lower performing/rated economy having a lesser standard of life when the PPP of that country suggests the opposite. It’s just another way to manipulate economic stats sometimes for the purpose of the citizens of the “better performing” economy to think they’re doing better than they really are for the benefit of their government, corporation and so on.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      @@jaysimpson6857 So comparing BOTH prices and wages?

    • @jaysimpson6857
      @jaysimpson6857 11 месяцев назад

      @@oneoflokis Yes with similar conversions that take into account goods and services and cost of living.

  • @daviddalby9699
    @daviddalby9699 11 месяцев назад +29

    The packet's are getting smaller as well . Thieving crooks in suits .

    • @2dradon2
      @2dradon2 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, noticed pre cooked 'lunch' chicken in tesco is 10g less

    • @dsmyify
      @dsmyify 11 месяцев назад +2

      Some packaging is staying the same but less is going in. Pringles used to fill the can to the top, not any more.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@dsmyifyThis IS all false advertising and selling under weight; well it should be treated as that, even if they change the weight somewhere in the small print on the packaging! 👎

    • @whiskysam2036
      @whiskysam2036 11 месяцев назад +2

      A packet of walkers crisps about 6 in the bottom of the bag I don't buy them anymore

    • @RickMyBalls
      @RickMyBalls 11 месяцев назад

      Is this English?

  • @mongoliandude
    @mongoliandude 11 месяцев назад +7

    Crazy how we pay so much more for objectively some of the poorest quality food in Europe.

  • @brendanshannon1706
    @brendanshannon1706 11 месяцев назад +12

    in 2020-2021 I was able to buy so much extra food without having to compromise on cheap brands, I could even buy more expensive drinks and afford weekly takeaway. However in 2022-2023 I can barely afford to buy processed stuff for myself. Things just changed so fast...

  • @pepegonzalez152
    @pepegonzalez152 11 месяцев назад +8

    The saddest thing is getting excited when u get a club card discount 😂😂😂

  • @earthappel1232
    @earthappel1232 11 месяцев назад +51

    You forgot to mention the sudden spike of supermarket profit its not inflation its greedflation.

    • @Bobbydyland
      @Bobbydyland 11 месяцев назад +6

      I work for a supermarket, and we're making a loss. Not all the inflation on the food is passed on to customers.
      It's not greed, it's piss poor governmental policy.

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 11 месяцев назад +3

      yeah, farmers might be passing a lot of the increase in costs on to consumers but not all of it. Many farmers are selling their food for less than it costs them to grow it at the moment. But Supermarket profits are going up. Mind you so are bank profits just as people start to struggle to pay their mortgages. Profiteering is rife throughout our economy

    • @Alex-fm5ke
      @Alex-fm5ke 11 месяцев назад +2

      They’re not making more profit

    • @someoneelse3456
      @someoneelse3456 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@WhichDoctor1 Why is the cost of food production so high atm? Is it purely energy inflation or is there more to it?

    • @alexhunter672
      @alexhunter672 11 месяцев назад +1

      Supermarkets have not had spikes in profit. Anything but! Ignoring COVID effects (COVID cost the supermarkets a lot, so coming out of COVID has helped), the supermarket profits are way down. Brands and the suppliers of supermarkets have had record profits however.

  • @Pironious
    @Pironious 11 месяцев назад +21

    Is it corporate profiteering? Because it is.

    • @Pironious
      @Pironious 11 месяцев назад +4

      Why are price controls just indicated as something that "probably won't work" with no sources? Of course limiting supermarket corporations's ability to achieve megaprofits at the excuse of inflation would have an effect. They'll cry bloody murder about it, but unless they're willing to sell off and leave the country, which they won't, they'll just have to absorb the cost, something they're perfectly able to do, just not while also providing shareholders record profits.

    • @amon_asentir
      @amon_asentir 11 месяцев назад

      Why here more than elsewhere, though?

  • @justwatching5188
    @justwatching5188 11 месяцев назад +11

    Could have mentioned that UK food used to be cheaper because they do 0% VAT on unprocessed food like fruit and veg and eg Germany got 7% min VAT. Further beginning of the year there was a reduced harvest in Spain and Marokko due to drought(climate change). Things like cucumber got ridiculous expensive in Europe as well as they could not important enough veg. But if the farmer that usually delivers to Germany and UK does not have much to sell anyway, why would they bother sending it to the UK with a lot of paperwork and the risk that there are issues on the border again when they can just put it in a truck and sell it to Germany or another EU countries without any checks. And for UK people that really want a cucumber they will take a premium.

    • @Verbindungs
      @Verbindungs 11 месяцев назад

      In Spain, food prices have doubled to quadrupled. Also, farmers complain that they are not even covering costs. So my suspicion is it has nothing to do with either drought or scheming supermarkets but with the last 10 years of non-stop money printing by Central Banks.

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 9 месяцев назад

      There's no vat on any of our food only in restaurants eu wanted yo put vat on food why. Do people think there's vat on food when y ho grocery shopping

  • @tonymintz8537
    @tonymintz8537 11 месяцев назад +14

    Yeah, I'm in Manchester rn from the US, so food here is easily 3X cheaper than anything we tend to buy in America, but even then I've noticed that prices have been pretty quickly jumping in the 9 months I've been here.

    • @KCKnowsBest
      @KCKnowsBest 11 месяцев назад +7

      But US salaries match their food prices. US is #4 in salaries worldwide. A new nurse in US easily makes $60k+. A new nurse in UK makes 22-25k pounds. I think gas & electricity is also cheaper in US.
      Obviously UK has free healthcare but anyone with a decent job in US also gets free healthcare through their job.
      UK has some of the lowest salaries among developed countries

    • @alexdavies5705
      @alexdavies5705 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​​@@KCKnowsBestwe don't have free healthcare. We're just paying for it even when we're not using it and don't get to save or invest the money.
      Not knocking what you said, just seems like everyone adds that in as though our government benevolently pays for our healthcare and this is some level of excuse for failings in the way we are governed.

  • @MrFreebrowsing
    @MrFreebrowsing 11 месяцев назад +4

    (sainsburys)
    Onken yogurt pots 1 year ago = £1
    Onken yogurt pots today = £2.25
    125% INCREASE!

    • @EdgarasCelkys
      @EdgarasCelkys 11 месяцев назад +1

      Doing my groceries now and it is £2.25 !!!. I though that was bs, because I saw them for £1.80 just a couple of weeks ago. Damn, this is so out of hand. I used to buy them for £1 like you said.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@EdgarasCelkysI think they sometimes have them on "special offer"?? Like you used to be able to buy them for £1 sometimes even in the Spar?? 😏 But I think you'd be hard pressed to find them for £1 now. Maybe £1.50 on special? (I like that brand! 😋)

  • @BanterRanterr
    @BanterRanterr 11 месяцев назад +13

    Because certain parts of economy should be regulated plus tories didn't invest in cheaper electricity so now we have enormously high rates 🙄

    • @noeyes6151
      @noeyes6151 11 месяцев назад +4

      What did they actually invest in is the question? Me myself and i is the answer

    • @BanterRanterr
      @BanterRanterr 11 месяцев назад

      @@noeyes6151 spot on 👊

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@noeyes6151💯👍

  • @arunavaacharyya6268
    @arunavaacharyya6268 11 месяцев назад +5

    Fact Check needed: Minute 2:15, the claim that is cheapest to eat healthy in the UK in the entire world. That claim has no base. There are much cheaper countries where fresh veggies are available for much less prices and healthy food can be eaten at less than 1.90 USD per meal. TLDR should work with a little bit less of an Eurocentric world order to get its facts right.

  • @yq3908
    @yq3908 11 месяцев назад +6

    $1.90 pre pandemic for food per day? Does not add up.

    • @Reaction_channel
      @Reaction_channel 11 месяцев назад +2

      I think might be per meal per person

  • @PabloTBrave
    @PabloTBrave 11 месяцев назад +34

    Went to my local supermarket last week to buy a small vacuum cleaner that i saw the week before however it had gone up 10% in the last 7 days. The annoying thing was it was the same stock they hadnt had a new delivery as one of the boxes had slight damage on the edge so i know it was the same. So at least some of it is supermarket profitering

    • @alexhunter672
      @alexhunter672 11 месяцев назад +1

      The vacuum cleaner price is not set by the supermarket. It is set by the vacuum brand. The supermarket only approves the price change. They can either fight the vacuum brand over it, or just agree it. They have less fight in them these days because of Aldi and Lidl coming along basically ruining the ability of supermarkets to resist pricing changes.

    • @PabloTBrave
      @PabloTBrave 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@alexhunter672 it was a cheep supermarket home brand vacuum, that had been on the shelf weeks

    • @KevinPughCM
      @KevinPughCM 11 месяцев назад +1

      Price changes always apply to existing stock too.
      How else could they do it? Have people watching for the last to sell before rushing out with new stock and simultaneously update the electronic payment system? Hmm, maybe a tad unworkable! 😮

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      Yes. Did you ask for a discount because of the bashed-up box?? I would have done.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@KevinPughCMHa ha ha, NOT SO! 🙂 In the days of the late 60s and the 70s, years of high inflation, and at the start of it all, the UK adopting decimalisation (Boy, was THAT a good excuse for shops of all kinds to put their prices up!! Before people got used to the new money.. 😏)
      Well; during those times, my parents ran a small wine and beer making supplies and equipment shop. To encourage trade, one of their incentives was to have Green Shield stamps. And the other one, as my mother so often told me, was the offer publicised on a notice at the front of the shop: "We sell old stock for old prices". SO THERE.

  • @marcoinvesting5339
    @marcoinvesting5339 11 месяцев назад +2

    Why is the UK government not funding the food industry?!

    • @thechongwolla
      @thechongwolla 11 месяцев назад

      Why should the gov subsidise private business. Farmers do get subsidies but why should fopd processors get subsidies? Why doesnt my sector get subsidies or that sector? Everyone cries about gov red tape and taxes then wants taxpayer funding... i hate this modern economy.

    • @raydromeda3777
      @raydromeda3777 11 месяцев назад

      They should be funding farms yes, but not the factories.

    • @marcoinvesting5339
      @marcoinvesting5339 11 месяцев назад

      ​@TheHarryButtery because the government is already subsidising the banks (only under a different name), so instead the government should invest in infrastructure to help the food industry scale up production, which is equal to cheaper food

  • @scepticskeptic1663
    @scepticskeptic1663 11 месяцев назад +6

    there seeing how high they can go before people say no..

  • @sanj21056
    @sanj21056 11 месяцев назад +3

    i don't know why everyone says it's only 19%. If you go to the supermarket basic things such as salt which was 35p now .65p, banana .70p kg now £1, vegetable oil 3ltr before £3 now £6 even cucumber which was only .45p now it is .85p. I can see everything is 100% increased.

    • @jaysimpson6857
      @jaysimpson6857 11 месяцев назад +2

      Which is beyond inflation, it’s greed.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      💯👍

    • @GalaxyFur
      @GalaxyFur 11 месяцев назад +1

      It's based on an "average". So some items may be 100% more expensive. But others may be unchanged or have only increased, say by 5%. So when you average out all groceries, on average they're up 19%.

  • @ultenhiemer
    @ultenhiemer 11 месяцев назад +8

    No offense, but you could have currency converted all of those figures... This isn't TLDR US afterall!

  • @joergquasnowitz3495
    @joergquasnowitz3495 11 месяцев назад +9

    Funny how it seems the UK has lost all grasp for reality after 2016. Ask yourself these questions: why is there inflation rising in the UK, but not in the EU or the US? why are however, company profits rising much more in the UK compared to the EU? and finally, if salaries are less than inflation, what does drive inflation in the UK?

    • @nenasiek
      @nenasiek 11 месяцев назад

      Sweden did the same as the u.k and didnt put a limit on energy providers profits and we got similar nr when it comes to inflation.
      Its the free market bs thats causing alot of issues. The u.k also have the brexit issue but its not the whole explaination.

    • @fitzstv8506
      @fitzstv8506 11 месяцев назад +1

      There is too many questions in that comment for the average brexiteer to get their heads around, try asking the questions one by one and us smaller words!.

    • @joergquasnowitz3495
      @joergquasnowitz3495 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@fitzstv8506 thanks - will do next time! 🙂

    • @dvidclapperton
      @dvidclapperton 11 месяцев назад

      Some people will only ever blame the pandemic and the war in the Ukraine entirely for the UK's economic turmoil such as slowing growth and higher inflation than the EU and the US even though It's obvious to most that Brexit also played a big part as well.

    • @gnrseanra9070
      @gnrseanra9070 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@fitzstv8506Very Good! How much is the shortfall in the EU budget that member states have been asked to contribute.....?😂

  • @maxharbig1167
    @maxharbig1167 11 месяцев назад +2

    Of course food in the UK was cheap but was it real food? Synthetcs and ersatz are cheaper than the real thing.“About 50.7%: or over half of all the food bought by families in the UK is “ultra-processed" , more than any others in Europe. Ultra-processed food is made in a factory with industrial ingredients and additives invented by food technologists and bearing little resemblance to the fruit, vegetables, meat or fish used to cook a fresh meal at home... In Italy: only 13.4%, in France: 14.2%." (Guardian 2 Feb 2018)

  • @RossG99
    @RossG99 11 месяцев назад +13

    Incredibly well put together video. This channel is brilliant, you explain things exactly like they should be explained. I’m a masters graduate in geopolitics and I find most of academia to be unnecessary over complicated in their delivery, attempting to sound smart as opposed to really teaching. People like you are far better, keep doing this!

    • @freshname
      @freshname 11 месяцев назад

      geopolitics??? like geopolitics is a science and not a scam?

    • @RossG99
      @RossG99 11 месяцев назад

      @@freshname huh?

  • @scottporter1998
    @scottporter1998 11 месяцев назад +6

    I've heard how UK farmers have complained about red-tape as well pushing up cost or causing problems causing them to be undercut by other counteys, maybe some help in that department might help

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 9 месяцев назад

      No its not brexit food rises not only here

    • @scottporter1998
      @scottporter1998 9 месяцев назад

      @@tenniskinsella7768 never said it was brexit

  • @StefanoDaGiau
    @StefanoDaGiau 11 месяцев назад +2

    You tell us? In italy food price keeps rising as well

  • @adogmcdizzle
    @adogmcdizzle 11 месяцев назад +3

    As I understand it inflation is entirely due to money printing. This wasn’t mentioned.

  • @kaiburgess2911
    @kaiburgess2911 11 месяцев назад +8

    Why didn’t you mention the price gouging supermarkets are doing

    • @alexhunter672
      @alexhunter672 11 месяцев назад +2

      The price is not set by the supermarket. It is set by the brand. The supermarket only approves the price change. They can either fight the brand over it, or just agree it. They have less fight in them these days because of Aldi and Lidl coming along basically ruining the ability of supermarkets to resist pricing changes.

    • @luluah1198
      @luluah1198 11 месяцев назад

      They set their own prices for their own brands though right ? I’ve noticed Sainsbury’s have a butter which costs the same as the leading brands , now usually the attraction towards supermarket brands is they’re not too bad in quality , but significantly cheaper . So why are they so high now? We can’t blame other brands for this surely ?

  • @AgentGreyFox
    @AgentGreyFox 11 месяцев назад +15

    Yes it's Brexit. But just believe in unicorns and it will happen. The Brexit motto

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 11 месяцев назад

      Remoaners too stupid to even watch the video

    • @adrianrouse5148
      @adrianrouse5148 11 месяцев назад +1

      Comedian.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      🦄🦄🦄😂

    • @davidfernandes1608
      @davidfernandes1608 11 месяцев назад +4

      I'm 100% certain you wouldn't be able to give a real literal example of how Brexit has caused an increase in prices other than generic statements. Our supply chains haven't changed and the recession/inflation has been global, food prices have gone up at similar rate in the EU and USA. So how exactly is this attributed to the functionality of Brexit?

    • @Iltazyara
      @Iltazyara 11 месяцев назад

      @@davidfernandes1608 There's a really, really easy one that is already in the video.
      £60million worth of food left to rot on the vine because our seasonal migratory workers from the EU didn't come/weren't allowed to come due to Brexit bullshittery. Could they have been replaced? Theoretically, yes.
      But for the Brexit Means Brexit Tories, never going to fucking happen.
      That, unquestionably, affected prices. Not all of them, but it is a directly attributable consequence of Brexit and Brexit related policies.
      Go ahead and continue pretending it isn't a problem, it won't stop being one just because you believe in unicorns.
      Do stop making false statements contradicted in the very video you're commenting on though. It just makes you look like a fool. Not that you should be unfamiliar with that, defending Brexit as you are.

  • @smithh104
    @smithh104 11 месяцев назад

    Great research including all sources. Most youtubers lack that

  • @Edzter
    @Edzter 11 месяцев назад +1

    Here's my take
    UK keeps increasing it's minimum wage every year, usually more than a lot of other european countries. The moment that happens, even before the actual wage increase, every retailer, service provider and everything every household uses increases their costs aswell to compensate.
    What happens is, multiple things increase in price just as your pay does, but the collective costs outweigh your wage increase, so you are always worse off, 5p doesn't seem like much, but 5p on 20 different items adds up. It's also food, so they can and do totally increase the price just because they can, people gotta eat. It's even easier to do so on more season based foods. For example, in the summer the UK should have a cheaper fruit season and a more expensive one in the winter as those get brought from way overseas. What happens instead is, once winter hits and the price gets it's spike, in the summer, they can not only retain that spike, but increase it again.

  • @russko118
    @russko118 11 месяцев назад +4

    before food chepest food? not fruit and vegetable, i remember that you had to count them as piece instead per kilos because it was super expensive... coming from italy. just because you spend less doesn't mean it's cheaper, just buy less or less quality overall

  • @antonk.2748
    @antonk.2748 11 месяцев назад +63

    I am so sick and tired of having to pay the price because 52% of UK citizens made the wrong decision 7 years ago. Can we please introduce a bill that doubles supermarket prices for all leave voters and gives a 50% discount for all remain voters?

    • @0w784g
      @0w784g 11 месяцев назад +5

      You know food inflation is up across the EU right? Unless you think 52% of UK citizens are to blame for that as well? I was in NED a few months back and food prices were shocking.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      Would be nice!! 🙂

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@0w784gWhere is the land of NED: and is it full of neds?? 😂😂

    • @walideg5304
      @walideg5304 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@0w784gthere is 60% more inflation in Uk than European Countries from 6% to 10,5 % in UK … be honest please.

    • @tasty_fish
      @tasty_fish 11 месяцев назад

      Yes! And separate lanes for passport checks. To identify who voted Leave and who voted Remain, simply ask how much the UK actually sent the EU each week, with a multiple choice answer.

  • @Jrjg88
    @Jrjg88 11 месяцев назад +1

    So every Tory policy is making us poorer:
    •Brexit
    •Privatising the energy sector
    •Austerity = no investment in anything including energy sector
    *slow cap*

  • @Lando-kx6so
    @Lando-kx6so 11 месяцев назад +1

    Food's still WAY cheaper than here in the US

  • @bbbf09
    @bbbf09 11 месяцев назад +3

    I'm lovin livin' in the idiocracy we now live in. The ultimate ship of fools.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      (Do you know the John Renbourn song: "The ship of fools/bids no adieus/Until the last wave ceases, O!" It's very beautiful. 🙂

  • @benjaminnicholas8746
    @benjaminnicholas8746 11 месяцев назад +8

    They will never bring the prices down because they know we will just keep buying no matter what

    • @Me0wish
      @Me0wish 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yeh I'm sure people can survive by not buying *checks notes* food.....

  • @chrisl.9750
    @chrisl.9750 11 месяцев назад +48

    brexit is a major factor, greed is a second major factor, central bank incompetence is the final nail in the coffin...

    • @terranceyeo3087
      @terranceyeo3087 11 месяцев назад +2

      so if Brexit is a major factor why is it going up around the world, look at the prices in us, the eu,aus, pi, and Asia, in general, all have gone up, I didn't know our little island could cause food hick across the world, or is it bigger institutions that control world food markets that are putting up prices, we can get something from halfway around the world cheaper than we can from our own country.

    • @boarfaceswinejaw4516
      @boarfaceswinejaw4516 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@terranceyeo3087 every country is dealing with its own set of major factors as to why there are economic issues. the UK isn't the US, nor is the UK in the EU. so why is the UK dealing with economic issues specifically related to it? well, because of Brexit.
      the reason its more expensive to get home-grown food in the UK is because you're actively undermining your sovereign industries in favor of cheaper foreign goods, undermining the very reason for why you went through with brexit in the first place. combined with the loss of markets for british farmers and fishermen as a result of brexit and now there is increasingly less competition and small businesses in general.

    • @terranceyeo3087
      @terranceyeo3087 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@boarfaceswinejaw4516 rubbish all i hear is brexit done it, we are poorer because of brexit, well the rest of the world gets on just fine without the eu, but this is what germany wanted a one nation and its comming fast as nations try to do things in their own countrys and find out the eu tells them they cannot do it, like hungry and poland.

    • @boarfaceswinejaw4516
      @boarfaceswinejaw4516 11 месяцев назад

      @@terranceyeo3087
      "the rest of the world gets on just fine without the EU"
      what are you even on about?
      "germany wanted one country"
      what does germany have to do with anything? its one country out of dozens, and last i checked the EU was whopping germany's ass over corruption, a whopping that most countries in the world are in desperate need of, and is one of the reasons why the UK left the EU because they dont want corruption oversight.
      "hungary and poland"
      ah yes, hungary and poland, the two buddies who stuck up for each other through thick and thin, at least until hungary's friend russia decided to invade ukraine, whereupon poland had enough of Hungary's shit.
      the two countries most keen on russian-styled authoritarianism are also the countries that obstruct the EU the most. also two countries are net-recipients of EU funding, and whos populations vote overwhelmingly in favor of remaining in the EU despite anti-eu rhetoric.

    • @sfernando6352
      @sfernando6352 11 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@terranceyeo3087Keep living in denial. Just because you voted for it 😂

  • @mingweicheese3709
    @mingweicheese3709 11 месяцев назад +1

    Many people nowadays are arguing that ultra processed food is more like tobacco than food. Britain also has bad obesity rate. Maybe we just eat worse food.

  • @Shortdood
    @Shortdood 11 месяцев назад +2

    I can believe cheapest in Europe but i refuse to think that pre-pandemic UK food was cheaper than in say, Vietnam or Thailand

  • @scottishwonders4810
    @scottishwonders4810 11 месяцев назад +3

    This is the first TLDR video I have to disliked, I don't think you covered all the reasons, I was hoping that you point out how much profit shops have made within the last couple of years too! They are simply using the COVID, War, ... etc as an excuse to charge more and more with no monitoring and regulation from the Gov. Also, don't tell us it's "against the free market" when they put rules in place for rent freeze (6 month), rent price increase (max 3%) and energy price cap! They intentionally want to run it as the wild west, their biggest motivation behind Brexit.

  • @davidmcculloch8490
    @davidmcculloch8490 11 месяцев назад +36

    A clear and accurate explanation, exposing some blatant government lies. As for giving up on price controls, that leaves tampering with interest rates, which is futile with cost-push inflation and will make most people poorer, resulting in even greater inequality.

  • @VictorECaplon
    @VictorECaplon 11 месяцев назад +1

    My family eats healthy local products in France and never ever paid even close to those numbers (meals average 1.5-2€)…I wonder how they get their numbers. Here in London, to eat the same, I have to pay £5-6…I’m really not sure what constitutes healthy in their studies, the only expensive things in France is meat…which is not that healthy…

  • @codingwithzak09
    @codingwithzak09 11 месяцев назад +2

    TLDR: It’s because of *Brexit*
    BBC: Don’t use the *B* word

  • @Da1Dez
    @Da1Dez 11 месяцев назад +16

    Brexit has been a disaster, speaking as someone who voted for it. We voted for it thinking that at the very least it would enable immigration to be clamped down on and finally get a points system in order to reduce high numbers of people to make gettihg jobs and living easier.
    However, the government still has done nothing and given us the cheapest and most lowest bar of points system's in the world, the epitome of a slap in the face, and now we're seeing the cost effects of Brexit.
    I want out of the UK now, the people in charge are the problem of all of this, this is evident of it big time!

    • @noeyes6151
      @noeyes6151 11 месяцев назад

      I didn't vote for it, but its good to see people say they got cheated, it was all about avoiding eu tax laws for the uks laundry economy, not anything else sadly

    • @luluismo
      @luluismo 11 месяцев назад +1

      and yet the govt still not do a damn thing

    • @patricaomas8750
      @patricaomas8750 11 месяцев назад +16

      You didn't realise this before voting for Brexit with the conservative British government, you want out of the UK. No with that kind of thought capacity the UK needs you out, don't let the door hit you on the way out to your new home as an immigrant.

    • @salkoharper2908
      @salkoharper2908 11 месяцев назад

      You wanted immigrants to be clamped down on when it suited you. Now you want to be an immigrant when it suits you. This is why people hate the English that think like you. You probably don't even understand how stupid and how much of a hypocrite you are.

    • @finntran1672
      @finntran1672 11 месяцев назад +9

      Getting a job in what exactly? Most Brits aren't hardworking enough to drive trucks or work on farms, nor are they smart enough to be doctors. There are shortages and vacancies all around in many sectors and yet those gaps have not been filled in the last 3 years

  • @archiemcberry7102
    @archiemcberry7102 11 месяцев назад +3

    It is the Tory diet plan. You have been wanting to lose weight and high food prices keep you trim.

  • @diesel92kj1
    @diesel92kj1 11 месяцев назад +2

    Pretty simple, the subsidiary that farmers receive is getting lower and lower and will end completely soon.

  • @gzappa
    @gzappa 11 месяцев назад +2

    The cost of Net Zero has very high cost.

  • @bigfunkymonkey
    @bigfunkymonkey 11 месяцев назад +5

    Tesco still flavoured water has increased about 50% since the end of 2020. I’d love to know how the input costs for still water have increased so much. Thankfully it’s about the only thing I buy from those con artists now

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah! Or for ANY mineral water, still or sparkling!! Spar keep putting theirs up and up. ALDI is about the only place you can get it for cheap now.

    • @diametheuslambda
      @diametheuslambda 11 месяцев назад +1

      Bottled water has immense profit margin, which overwhelms any input. In my part of the world, bottlers make like 14% , wholesalers make like 8%, and retailers pocket the rest.

    • @whiskysam2036
      @whiskysam2036 11 месяцев назад +1

      Tesco and asda are a rip off

    • @becomingfr33
      @becomingfr33 11 месяцев назад

      Just get a water filter. Buying bottled water is just silly.

  • @rubberplantsandwich
    @rubberplantsandwich 11 месяцев назад +11

    What you have to remember is every shop and supermarket has gas and electricity bills going up ar extortionate rates. Freezers, fridges, lighting, heating, aircon, the lot, you wouldn't want to pay their bills.

    • @perhaps1094
      @perhaps1094 11 месяцев назад +7

      Were talking about supermarkets not local shops,anyone deluding themselves into thinking tesco and aldi are struggled is too far gone, most of these companies are making record profits since the bounce back from covid.

  • @jim-es8qk
    @jim-es8qk 11 месяцев назад +1

    our farmers are more efficient and the supermarkets keep prices low.

  • @olivermoore7020
    @olivermoore7020 11 месяцев назад +1

    05:23: "The UK is producing less food than it used to, for starters". Okay, but how much food is it producing for mains and desserts? 🤔😉

  • @bmac3093
    @bmac3093 11 месяцев назад +3

    Could huge increases in energy bills and idiotic inflationary rate rises leading to higher wage demands have anything to do with it ?

    • @adrianrouse5148
      @adrianrouse5148 11 месяцев назад +1

      Wages are not driving inflation. Never have done. UK wages for years lower than rises in costs. That's why wage to costs now at a victorian levels.

    • @bmac3093
      @bmac3093 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@adrianrouse5148 never said wages were driving inflation. Wage demands are on the back of all the other shite and still aren’t keeping pace but are still a factor in food price growth

  • @Ziffwolf
    @Ziffwolf 11 месяцев назад +15

    Let assume the farmers costs go down and they pass those savings onto the distributor, what mechanisms are there to stop supermarkets charging the same inflated price and pocketing the difference?

    • @lordmartinak
      @lordmartinak 11 месяцев назад +4

      competition in one word ... but the thing is that stability is also a factor in this: the more confident a business is that nothing will go wrong in the future, the more they can afford to lower their margin to gain larger share on the market - on the other hand, if they expect more disruptions (maybe because such a thing just happened) then they need to maintain a rainy day fund so margin needs to be higher until things stabilise themselves - now government can force them to lower it but that can have other unpleasant consequences and it probably isn't worth it - that is why maintaining economical stability is sooo important

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@lordmartinakTrue! 💯👍

  • @chrisparti
    @chrisparti 11 месяцев назад

    Its the gas that annoys me, we are now capped at 85% more than we were two years ago, however the gas is 4p/M3 cheaper than it was 2 years ago so why are we paying 85% more in the UK?

  • @sykessaul123
    @sykessaul123 11 месяцев назад +1

    Saying food is only 10% of expenses might not mean it's cheap compared to rEU, it can just mean that other expenses are also that much higher than rEU. Bad stat to define differences, would definitely go with adjusted currency for everyday items (bread, milk, etc.).

  • @berserkirclaws107
    @berserkirclaws107 11 месяцев назад +4

    Time to go on the very strict diet I guess ☹️

  • @viquiben4919
    @viquiben4919 11 месяцев назад +5

    Italians use to buy fresh food which is usually more expensive than the precooked highly processed food that is so dear to brits.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      True! 💯👍👍

  • @mike9512
    @mike9512 11 месяцев назад

    Why is this even a debate? It's greed, pure and simple. Corporations callously charging exorbitant prices on essential items.

  • @TrevorAndSky
    @TrevorAndSky День назад

    Maybe this has nothing to do with it, but the statistics seem flawed, or at least poorly designed. I’m Italian, and sure, we spend more on food the uk people, but that’s because we usually buy more expensive stuff. Italians buy premium flour and olive oil and fresh foods. In the Uk and a lot of continental Europe a lot of people choose to buy at discount supermarkets (France is more similar to Italy cause they have higher food standards too). If you’re buying industrial bread and butter and long conservation milk and eggs you’re gonna buy them at the cheapest price. And you have that option in Italy too. But, unlike in the uk, Italians are picky, we buy olive oil and wine and freshly baked bread, which by itself would already be pricier, but you gotta also consider that if you’re buying these types of foods, you’re usually not buying them at a discount supermarket but rather at a “fancier” local business. It’s a bit stupid to compare how much the single family spends on food, because that’s mainly a cultural difference. How about you tell me how much a kg of fresh tomatoes costs in the UK vs Italy? That would be a more fair comparison. If all you eat is Tesco cheapest sandwiches every day of course you’re gonna spend less on food…

  • @exdeath64
    @exdeath64 11 месяцев назад +8

    "Is *insert horrible thing in Britain* the fault of brexit?" Is always "yes and we told you this would happen in the first place you idiots"

    • @sambranton3346
      @sambranton3346 11 месяцев назад

      I think people who voted brexit knew this could happen. Our politicians have made sure its the case. Stop crying about loosing a vote.

    • @Alex38369
      @Alex38369 11 месяцев назад

      Brexit comes from a place of arrogance. Leave voters thought that Britain would be getting trade deals with everyone and that countries would be rushing to trade. That is not the case. Britain is a small rich European country like any other just without the eu to help. Disrupting trade with everyone and going alone is usually not the way to do things

    • @sambranton3346
      @sambranton3346 11 месяцев назад

      @Alex38369 I think your wrong. We had every opportunity to get deals and trade on wto terms with the eu. Our politicians refused and have made sure its a disaster so we are forced to rejoin. That last part may make you happy, but try and remember this is supposed to be a democracy! Our politicians have shown us we do not have a democracy at all, just an authoritarian group in control regardless of who we vote for passing off the illusion its a democracy using the media to peddle lies and sway public opinion.

  • @thedakor2792
    @thedakor2792 11 месяцев назад +7

    When I was on vacation in London, I noticed that the prices of the products in the supermarket changed depending on the time of day. In the evening the prices are lower than in the morning. I didn't understand how it could be, it's ineffective. The supermarket had to hire more workers to change the price of the products instead of keeping the same low price all day.
    Another thing I noticed, in London it is customary to have small neighborhood supermarkets but I did not see large supermarkets in a huge area. In my country, it is customary to have large supermarkets, which lowers the price of products.

    • @DUIofPhysics
      @DUIofPhysics 11 месяцев назад +2

      That's far more of london thing, then a rest-of-the-uk thing. London operates quite differently - most people don't have cars and commute in and about by train or bus - so there is heavy influence on walking & using the underground. As a result people do smaller amounts of shopping, more regularly, within a closer range of where they live. Whereas most other cities in the uk have a large number of supermarkets, as driving there is trivial.

    • @justwatching5188
      @justwatching5188 11 месяцев назад +4

      As a tourist you probably spent most of your time in central London/zone 1? Rent prices are so high in central London that not many people life there (and if you got money for a 1mil flat you probably do not care if your bread is 10 pence more expensive or not) If a huge supermarket would be there, the rent for them would be enormous (think 250000 +/year depending on location and size. Hardly any of the shops on Oxford Street make any profit as rents are so high, they are just there for advertisement and brands make their money with their other shops. Even if a supermarket would say they do not care about high rent and that in central London their main sales are lunch foods only, central London got lots of historical buildings and streets and there would be no space to build a brand new giant supermarket. Take a 10 min tube journey to zone 2 or 3 and there are giant supermarkets like everywhere else. Not sure about the being cheaper in the evening part. What they like to do is send somebody marking down fresh food which will go out of date same day or tomorrow. This is more to reduce waste and somebody would have to walk around checking and throwing things out anyway. So they send somebody a few hours before closing time to reduce prices on fresh veg, salads and sandwiches(snack food) and see if they can sell itfor 50% off or something before binning it a few hours later.

    • @thedakor2792
      @thedakor2792 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@justwatching5188I spent my time in West End area

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@justwatching5188Should give it to a food bank rather than "binning it". Sell by/best before by dates are largely bollocks anyway. For example, a nice piece of Brie or Camembert isn't "off", when it reaches its sell-by date. It's usually ripe and just ready to eat by then! 🙂

  • @danrudge5997
    @danrudge5997 11 месяцев назад +2

    2 person house. Slight dietary requirements.
    2020 food needs budget. One month £120
    2023 food needs budget £320
    2020 energy budget electricity and gas £100
    2023 energy budget one month electricity and gas £250
    Income 2020 per month £1300 per person.
    I come 2023 per month per person £650
    Rent is about £325. You do the math. This is my actual life.

  • @paxundpeace9970
    @paxundpeace9970 11 месяцев назад +2

    For context New Zealand food prices are high because they are an isolated island and anything that they don't produce which is already costly has to be imported from far away.
    Australia is know for its sudbornly high food prices hitting above 10 Aussie Dollars for a head of iceberg salat.

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 11 месяцев назад +56

    *Why are UK Food Prices so High?* Brexit, Brexit, Brexit, and Brexit.
    EDIT - please don't message me anymore - Im on the beach now 🙂[strangely no sh!t, oh thats cos Im in the EU]

    • @Adamm17004
      @Adamm17004 11 месяцев назад

      “brexit means brexit” really means “brexit means [a lack of] money”

    • @Froge0
      @Froge0 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's mostly due to Covid and the Ukraine War, people with an agenda are just saying it's mostly due to Brexit because they can't get over a democratic decision made over half a decade ago.

    • @williampatrickfagan7590
      @williampatrickfagan7590 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@Gary-bz1rf
      The UK has not fed itself in nearly 300 years.
      At the start of the Industrial Revolution c1750 the farm labourer left tje land to go work in the factories for more money.

    • @davidgaskin5417
      @davidgaskin5417 11 месяцев назад +6

      You didn't watch the video then?

    • @owenb8636
      @owenb8636 11 месяцев назад +2

      According to politicians, it's everything except Brexit

  • @dazlock4491
    @dazlock4491 11 месяцев назад +3

    Talking about UK food from a UK channel but talking in dollars!!!
    I guess you're not making these videos for Brits anymore then...

  • @aswientj.tj.1446
    @aswientj.tj.1446 11 месяцев назад +1

    Transportation cost has caused the imported food prices high that is the effect of Brexit....

  • @eliahabib5111
    @eliahabib5111 11 месяцев назад +1

    How are farmer charging retailer consumer more?
    That doesn't make any sense.
    Even for food item that are ready for sale as soon as they are collected (most fruits and vegetables for example) a very small fraction is sold retail by farmers.
    In most cases the prise increase require also at least food industry and shops collaboration.

  • @WhiteManInAVan
    @WhiteManInAVan 11 месяцев назад +7

    As an independent palletised food delivery courier, my costs and charges have gone massively mainly due to the low emission zones. I now have to charge twice as much as i used to a couple years ago to recoup not just the charges but safeguard against anytime i get fined. Alternatively I could upgrade the truck but then i would have to charge more as the cost of compliant trucks is silly. It used to be just London where my prices increased but the more zones, the more areas my prices go up.

    • @ohwhatworld5851
      @ohwhatworld5851 11 месяцев назад +5

      No No. Didn't you get the message? Aside from the Ukraine issues, the only other reason for food prices going up is because of Brexit. Please watch the video again. Then say it to yourself 5 times in the mirror each day in case you forget.

    • @SirAntoniousBlock
      @SirAntoniousBlock 11 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe you could get yourself a couple of cart horses, you lot said you wanted to go back to the good old days. 😂

    • @WhiteManInAVan
      @WhiteManInAVan 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@SirAntoniousBlock thats a good plan. I could charge even more then as it would take 10-20 times longer to get anywhere and I'd more money to feed and house the extra horses for bigger deliveries. Can you imagine? If I normally charge £400 to deliver 12 pallets of food upto 30 miles away, i could then charge £8000-£10000. You eco freaks really know how to save the planet 😂

    • @SirAntoniousBlock
      @SirAntoniousBlock 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@WhiteManInAVan Oh well it was just a thought.
      Don't worry about it then, pretty soon you won't have anything to deliver anyway.

    • @salkoharper2908
      @salkoharper2908 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@WhiteManInAVan Where do you do deliveries? I understand the cost for buying a more modern, less polluting truck is expensive. However you have to think about it as a long term investment for your business. It is the way of progress, you can fight it and fail, or modernise. In my business (Publishing), the English distributor we worked with collapsed and the 1 UK competitor we had collapsed after brexit. Our trade in books mostly goes to Belgium, Holland, Germany etc. I'm not crying about it, I moved our business to the Netherlands instead. Now we are VAT registered and trading in Holland. That's business, you evolve or you go extinct.

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 11 месяцев назад +5

    Man, the UK cannot catch a break! Brexit will go down in history as one of the country's most colossal mistakes.

    • @SpiritmanProductions
      @SpiritmanProductions 11 месяцев назад +3

      I just hope outsiders realise that the electorate believed the false promises and didn't ask for this (even though there were plenty of warnings).

  • @dannywest7587
    @dannywest7587 11 месяцев назад

    Lived in Europe for 40 years ,food prices are high everywhere!!!!!!

  • @louvendran7273
    @louvendran7273 11 месяцев назад

    Amazing when one does a sales price analysis, one does not look at profitability margins, key drivers of these margins but rather the base cost of inputs. For you commoners out there, this analogy puts it best. When you have a leaky tap, your plumber goes to check mainline out side your house to check for a leak. 🤔 Yes energy costs especially in the UK have risen & will play a factor on certain goods as stated. In my opinion, one needs to follow the smoke to find the fire.

  • @williampatrickfagan7590
    @williampatrickfagan7590 11 месяцев назад +9

    Any snag or hiccup in tje European Union ( weather logistics strikes fuel shortage etc) will result in less food being exported from the European Union to the UK.
    The reason being that suppliers in the European Union can supply fresh and processed food to be sold anywhere in the European Union with just a delivery docket and invoice.
    To export to the UK one needs a lot of paperwork which is hassle which takes time which means bureaucracy which means extra costs.
    But at least you are well on your way up that world famous creek having abandoned the paddle.
    That is a Brexshit bonus for the European Union.

    • @adrianrouse5148
      @adrianrouse5148 11 месяцев назад

      Don't be silly. We are in the transition period still buying tarrif free from the eu . When the transition period is over then the UK is free to buy elsewhere. Turkey and marroco waiting to sell to the UK.

    • @williampatrickfagan7590
      @williampatrickfagan7590 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@adrianrouse5148 How far is Turkey and Morocco away from the UK?
      Morocco is about 2500 Km away and Turkey about 3500 Km away. Fresh food will not be as fresh nor as cheap after transport coats are factored in.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@williampatrickfagan7590💯👍

  • @brucebarratt99
    @brucebarratt99 11 месяцев назад +4

    I've lived in poland in the last few years and before that spent time in France and Germany with in between bits in the UK. I can't imagine where they get these numbers. I think it's best to assume they're straight up lies. It seems to be the opposite to any reality I've seen. Also the mechanism for food prices to be cheaper in a country that has to import more food and where discount supermarkets have a smaller foothold... How could this happen at all? A quick check on the origin of these stats seems to show that you'd have to be a vegetable to use them in an informational presentation if you weren't trying to deceive.

  • @boomerix
    @boomerix 11 месяцев назад

    So how come Brits were telling me already pre-pandemic that they can't afford to shop in Tesco or a local butcher, bakery, vegetable shop etc. and were forced to shop at palces like Aldi?
    I thought maybe our good local shops in central-eastern Europe are just more affordable, but apparently British food was even cheaper then here?
    You'd think they live in Somalia the way they used to complain over food prices back then, don't even wanna know how much they complain now.

  • @himaro101
    @himaro101 11 месяцев назад

    Our shop has gone from £40 - £50 a week to £60 - £70 a week. Our mortgage is about to go up by £250 per month. Our heating will go up astronomically when our current lock in ends in January as we fixed just before the invasion.
    Despite my wife and I earning a decent amount for our age, I'm now looking for a second job just to keep a roof on our head and food on the table.
    Almost half my wife's income goes on 2 days of childcare per week.
    This is unsustainable and the government appears to do nothing to help people struggling now.

  • @jim-es8qk
    @jim-es8qk 11 месяцев назад +4

    Combined cost of a supermarket shop June 2023.
    France - £67.57
    Spain - £52.75
    Italy - £52.16
    UK - £51.72
    Netherlands - £50.68
    Germany - £47.25

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 11 месяцев назад +3

      Atleast france has cheaper energy bills.

    • @salkoharper2908
      @salkoharper2908 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@davidty2006 Yea, electricty in France is only 55% the cost per KWH than in the UK. It's literally half the price.

    • @oneoflokis
      @oneoflokis 11 месяцев назад

      Where did you get these stats from? 🙂

  • @Zoco101
    @Zoco101 11 месяцев назад +7

    When you agree to apply sanctions that backfire and you (or your friends) blow up vital energy infrastructure, energy becomes an issue. Poking the bear, then spending billions on weapons (to give away) and training foreign troops - these things don't help the British economy either - but they do help certain industrialists and politicians to get very rich.
    So, Britain has had a triple whammy hit its economy: Brexit, a pandemic panic, and fighting an unnecessary proxy war.
    How has the British public allowed all this to happen? It can be explained in one word - paranoia. Paranoia is used to manipulate Brits. Too bad for the general economy!

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 11 месяцев назад

      It's actually been proven recently as people noticed that victims of terrorism as saying the same things in statements over and over again.

  • @juliamartins7478
    @juliamartins7478 11 месяцев назад +1

    Last time, a pack of four small chicken breasts was £4.79 😂😂😂😂

  • @ChineseKiwi
    @ChineseKiwi 11 месяцев назад +1

    1:05 - As a Kiwi who lives overseas, I see you were comparing some of the cheapest to some of the most expensive LOL

  • @_barncat
    @_barncat 11 месяцев назад +8

    maybe when you wage war on lorry drivers and farming, you pay higher prices for food 🤡

  • @ricequackers
    @ricequackers 11 месяцев назад +4

    Lockdown. A lot of it was lockdown, where the government shut down much of the economy then printed money en masse.
    Also the dysfunctional energy market where wholesale electricity rates are set by the most expensive producer, minimum price guarantees by the government (paid by the taxpayer of course), green energy levies accounting for a significant chunk of retail electricity prices, and a failure to continuously invest in nuclear energy.
    And some old-fashioned greed too.

  • @GalaxyFur
    @GalaxyFur 11 месяцев назад +1

    Generally speaking, inflation here in the United States has been far less compared to the UK. Food prices in the UK have also seen higher inflation rates compared to U.S. food inflation rates. So, while purchasing food in the UK remains cheaper than in the U.S. that gap is definitely shrinking. UK food prices are expected to keep inflating at a faster rate going forward. Once October hits, there will be another big inflation spike in UK grocery prices as more Brexit controls come into place. But it's not just food prices that are set to keep on inflating at a faster rate. Generally, all expenses will become larger after October.
    Plus, some industries are likely to disappear from the UK going forward as a result of Brexit. Some British businesses plan on leaving the UK for the EU and the United States soon. This will make things even harder for UK residents due to job losses. The EU and the U.S. can simply out-compete the UK with the way things are right now.

    • @gnrseanra9070
      @gnrseanra9070 11 месяцев назад

      What utter nonsense! Eurozone/Germany in a recession and businesses leaving due to higher energy costs...piped gas is cheaper than LNG, Germany had pipelines blown up by.....? 🤔.....IMF revising doomsday forecasts for UK again....We had highest growth in G7 till last quarter of 2022....worry about yourselves you had inflation since Biden took over before the war....!

    • @gnrseanra9070
      @gnrseanra9070 11 месяцев назад

      Jan .....2020

    • @GalaxyFur
      @GalaxyFur 11 месяцев назад

      @@gnrseanra9070 0_o ?

  • @kittyblossom7342
    @kittyblossom7342 11 месяцев назад

    What!! Are you kidding me? My boyfriend lives in UK and he buys food at half the price than I do. I live in Belgium.