[OC] Comparing Food Prices from 2020 to 2024



[OC] Comparing Food Prices from 2020 to 2024

Posted by geekonthemoon

28 comments
  1. This would be much more telling if it had the gross profits compared from 2020 as well – this way we could determine accurately whether the ‘record profits’ people are talking about have been generated by increased profit margins, or if they appear larger because they have not been inflation adjusted.

    Good info though, just not as good as it could be.

  2. The data presented here isn’t even sufficient to prove the point being made. You would need to compare profit margins in 2019 to 2023 and show they increased meaningfully to try and prove price increases were due to being “ripped off” and not just inflation.

  3. Along with the comparison of the gross profit margin for the same years, I think it would be especially informative if you could add the columns for the C-level and board compensations; seeing how much these have risen is sadly telling about where the money is going.

  4. How were these products selected? Something tells me this selected for products with the highest price increases. (I.e., not a representative sample)

  5. I buy boxes of rice-a-roni fairly frequently.

    Pre-covid they were $0.85 a piece. Now they’re $1.45

  6. Echoing others on here that a profit comparison would be good. I’d personally like to see OI% too, since this is a much better indicator on how far a company is away from zero profits, relative to its total revenue.

    Well-displayed and easy to read to be sure!

  7. The relevant number here would be net profit margin since many expenses have increased. Wal-Mart’s net profit margin in 2024 is [2.34%](https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/WMT/walmart/profit-margins#:~:text=Current%20and%20historical%20gross%20margin,31%2C%202024%20is%202.34%25.), which is below both their historical average and their peak in 2020. Their gross profit margin is also down from where it’s been most of the last decade. Companies aren’t profiteering, it’s just that operations, ingredients, and payroll are all more expensive.

  8. Why not show the profits from 2020 as well so folks could compare? Of course companies profit, how much more have they profited with the price changes?

  9. Why would you use gross profits over net profits? Very misleading. Would also throw in net profit margin.

  10. I genuinely feel bad for those with bigger families especially those that have paychecks that certainly haven’t kept up!!

  11. It would be a better comparison if it also compared %change in profit from 2020 to 2024.

  12. honestly considering opening a social media account called “understanding modern feudalism” and this kind of content is top of the list.

  13. 1.) Gross profits does not = net profits or even EBIDTA.

    2.) This doesn’t account for shrinkflation as well. In a lot of cases, the price went up and the size/weight of what you got went down

  14. I’d like to see if there is a correlation in their overall profits as well between the years

  15. it’d be far more interesting to show how they raise the price of food items while also putting less food in them. Sneaky shit like going from 24lbs to 22lbs or 20lbs then charging the same price or raising it.

  16. It would be epic to see what wal mart’s profit would be if the prices were equal to the 2020 prices. I’m sure they would still have over $60 billion in profits and yet people blame anything but corporate greed.

  17. The real damage of this is this that when other people see Walmart increase its prices, that becomes the norm, the justification, and the all increase their prices.

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