Food Prices Follow Fuel Through The Roof
Susan Koeppen Explores Skyrocketing Prices
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Play CBS Video Video Skyrocketing Food Prices Food costs are soaring in the worst food inflation crisis in nearly 20 years. Susan Koeppen reports and offers a few tips to lessen the impact.
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(CBS/EARLY SHOW)
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What's being called the worst food inflation in nearly 20 years is affecting everything from soup to nuts, according to Early Show consumer correspondent Susan Koeppen
She noted Tuesday that high gas and diesel fuel prices are hiking the cost of everything from growing food to transporting it, and consumers are paying the price.
What's more, the Department of Agriculture predicts food prices will rise another four-to-five-percent this year.
The USDA says the price of whole milk has increased nearly 19 percent over the last year, cheddar cheese has climbed by 15 percent, and eggs are up a whopping 25 percent.
Jennifer Strauss, who does the shopping for her family of five, calls the higher prices "kind of scary," saying, "Every time you go to the store, even when you run in for one thing, you spend $50-to-$100 on a few items."
Some of the biggest jumps have been in wheat products. Over the last year, white bread is up 11 percent and pasta 13 percent.
"Wheat commodity prices have almost doubled in the last six months," says USDA economist Ephraim Leibtag, "and there's been a big push for those products across the globe." Such demand pushes prices up.
But economists say there's some good news in the produce aisle, where tomatoes are only up four percent and potatoes six percent.
"We've had better weather this year for most fruits and vegetables, and so prices aren't up that much as compared to last year at this time," Leibtag explains.
Some consumers, says Koeppen, are adjusting to the higher prices by shopping at warehouse stores that offer better values; others are cutting back on luxury food items.
She says people should "shop the sales" and use coupons, which could save families as much as $1,000 a year. The best coupons, she continues, are in the Sunday newspaper. But some companies don't offer coupons unless you ask for them, by calling the 800 numbers on their labels.
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- Food prices and everything else goes up but salaries are the same, plus the minimum wage is not a livable wage. Gas prices should be forced down to $1 dollar a gallon and the minimum wage should be no less than $10 an hour. Many people work full time jobs for a minimum of $7 an hour and then have no choice but to ask for foodstamps in order to eat.
www.marymiami.wordpress.com - Reply to this comment
- WE should NEVER have been feeding corn to cows, pigs etc. in the FIRST PLACE!! the REAL issue is that, by growing corn (which Cows etc. are NOT evolved to eat!!), they grow LESS of the things we WILL eat.. like Wheat, tomatoes etc. Read the "Omnivores dilemma" then come back and comment.. I will wait..
What really needs to be done is to let the farm fuel BE ethanol! Design farm equipment to use Ethanol efficiently .. you should use Ethanol at the source. NOT ship it around the country! Let all the farms that are at/near Ethanol production USE ethanol.. then we decrease the amount of Diesel etc. THEY use, lowering demand, lowering prices. - Reply to this comment
- The government is still paying farmers not to grow food.
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- Alcohol made from corn is not energy efficient. It uses corn which should have gone for feed. This makes cattle more expensive to feed and milk and cheese more expensive to produce. Rising prices for corn and soybeans have caused some farmers to produce less wheat. Coupled with drought/floods/demand in high population parts of the world, wheat prices have gone up which makes your pizza and mac and cheese more expensive.
All of this because we do not have a good alternate to gasoline, especially if we do not give up our love for gas guzzling large vehicles. While conservation does not solve the problem completely, it sure would help to strive for high efficiency in our vehicles. I wonder if $4.50 gas will help? - Reply to this comment
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