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Groceries: 9 Foods That Are Shrinking Print E-mail
(21 votes, average 4.57 out of 5)
Food - Groceries
Written by livecheap staff   
Monday, 23 November 2009 02:55
Article Index
Groceries: 9 Foods That Are Shrinking
Super Premium Ice Cream
Breyers and Dryers
Tuna Fish: Less Fish
Orange Juice Aint So Juicy
Sausage: The Other Light Meat
Fabio-Less is Lighter
Ahoy Matey
Yogurt: Healthier and Lighter
All Pages

There’s a nifty little trick going on at grocery stores and they're hoping that most consumers are none the wiser. For some time now, product manufacturers have been reducing the size of their packages and the weight of the product inside them. It used to be that groceries were sold in simple sizes: 1 lb, 2 liters, 1 quart, a pint, etc.

Consumers got used to making price comparisons and purchasing decisions based on those standard sizes. Driven by bottom line considerations, food manufacturer’s started to get inventive on ways they could increase profits without increasing prices. And of course, in many cases, they just went ahead and raised their prices anyhow.

Now, manufacturers will tell you that their ingredient prices skyrocketed a few years ago and people are only comfortable paying certain price points at the grocery store and that's what forced their hands and obliged them to shrink the size in order to hit those magic price points. We just don’t buy it especially since commodities prices have now plunged and the packages haven’t gotten any bigger!

 

Here’s our list of 9 foods that have shrunk in the grocery store. Notice any of your favorite brands? If you have others to add to our list, please add them in the comments section.

Coffee: Good to the Last Drop Because It’s Also the First Drop

Coffee was the original shrinkage sinner many years ago. Once sold in 16 ounce cans (You know, a “Pound of Coffee!”). The industry got creative with escalating coffee prices. Our friends at Folgers and Maxwell House dropped their coffee from 16 ounces to 13 ounces but conveniently explained that the 13 ounces would make the same amount of coffee as the original package because they “puffed” the granules. Sure, if you just make the coffee weaker, you won't notice the difference. That wasn’t good enough and now their pound of coffee is a tiny 11 to 11.5 ounces for a whopping 30% reduction. Of course, they didn't bother to change the size of the can so you just get to pay for more air.

Folgers



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Yasmin104  - Packing Tricks |2009-11-29 03:35:37
Excess packaging can make product look like a great value. It is niot unique to USA, in Italy they often have a large cavity at the bottom of laundry detergents, so the package you buy is really half full.

These are silly practices that increase our garbage waste and deplete our natural resources.

Some day I hope we go back 70 years to a time when reusable containers are filled with essentials like sugar, flour, oil, milk, cereal..etc and we stop destroying our environment with disposable packaging.
Joe  - Absurd article length |2009-12-03 07:44:12
An article that spans nine freaking pages? Are you serious? That's just absurd.
Ian Durkan  - Re: Absurd article length |2009-12-03 09:24:28
Livecheap is providing more value for your article. It's like an Article Growth Ray in action!
dave  - hahah |2009-12-03 18:41:12
LOL. The Article Growth Ray. I love it. Shame on the Consumerist for linking to this article. Shame Shame, Consumerist.
Aaron |2009-12-03 09:46:31
NINE PAGES?!?!?!
You sound like the person that wants the pizza cut into 8 slices since you can't eat ten!!
Tran  - Try "All Pages" |2009-12-03 19:21:01
Dude, that's why they have "All pages" at the top right. Click and its one, very long page.
Andy  - Pasta Sauce |2009-12-03 11:23:21
Pasta Sauce has done the shrinking thing too. About 10 years ago a standard size jar of Prego was 32oz, over the years it has been shrunk no less than 4 times, first to 30oz, then to 28, then 26(25.5 on some "specialty" sauces) and now the standard size Prego is a whopping 24oz. They've also reduced the size of their "Economy" size from 48oz to 45oz.
And their small size has gone from 16oz to 12 oz.
Yet strangely enough at the same time the sizes were reduced, the price went up 10 cents.

Kenman  - Chik-fil-a |2009-12-03 13:43:23
Ever notice the to-go containers used in serving side items at Chik-fil-a & Boston Market are pressed up in the middle? (By a LOT!) Makes the container look as if your getting as much as you used to. Flip it over (with the lid secure of course)to see how much volume they cut out of the portion. Just another rip off from restaurants.
Sian  - Tuna |2009-12-03 17:15:23
Much as I like tuna, (though the canned stuff is tragic) I wouldn't mind if canned tuna gets shrink-ray'd right out of existence. More sustainable fishing needs to be forced.
 
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