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by rollerboi 2409 days ago
>hiding inflation by cheapening construction

So true. I've heard for years that the size of our cereal boxes/chip bags/candy bars are decreasing, ever so slightly, while the price remains the same.

Reminds me of that whole frog-in-a-pot thought experiment. If you toss a frog into a pot of boiling water, it jumps back out immediately. But if you put it in a pot of room-temperature water, and slowly raise the temperature, the frog gets acclimated slowly and doesn't notice that sooner or later, he's being boiled alive.

2 comments

The analogy is apt, but one must remember in the original frog experiment the frog's brain had been surgically altered.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiling_frog#Experiments_and...

> the frog's brain had been surgically altered.

Article says removed.

Yep. That certainly qualifies as an alteration! :)

To be frank, I wasn't sure how much of the brain stem was left, but was aware of wikipedia's wording.

To your point, I noticed that chocolate milk cartons have decreased from 1L to 750ML, yet they kept the same price. Further, the 750ML option was not offered before, and the 1L option is not offered now, which adds to the deception.
I find it most frustrating when you go to a shop and there's two things roughly equivalent you want to buy, one of them is $2 for 200 mL and the other is $1.80 for 180 g.

There's every other kind of trickery in the shops to prevent you from being able to assess the relative value of two products, to render those price comparisons redundant (like the fact that the two products are listed, one $/100 g and the other listed $/kg).

I've just moved to Germany, and here it's almost impossible to buy the thing you want — they always seem to subpackage it into segments so that you have to use more than you want and therefore come back. I thought the marketplace was hostile in Australia sheesh.

(But, 750 megalitres is significantly more than 750 litres.)