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-20 points

Domestically produced food shouldn’t go up that much.

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4 points

It will anyway, prices never really went back down after covid for a reason

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7 points

If the value of money goes down, prices go up.

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1 point

The dollar is internal and farmers make annual purchases so they will have already bought their stuff they need for this season so they shouldn’t be too affected by exchange rates. The US makes its own oil and derivatives like fertilizer and farm equipment so they shouldn’t be too affected for now.

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24 points

When all of the regulations go out the window, affordable or not, food quality is going to slide into the dumpster.

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-12 points

Quality maybe but there’s no reason domestically produced food should go up a lot. The fact that China refused tons of pork and soy beans imports from America means there will be a glut and that means terrible finances for farmers but hardly expensive food.

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15 points

You think grocers will pass the savings on?

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22 points

I’ve already seen prices go up considerably at basically any grocery store I’ve been at. Capitalists will continue to increase the prices regardless.

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5 points

The fact that China refused tons of pork and soy beans imports from America means there will be…

huge, unexpected profits for groceries?

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1 point
*

Some naive shit right here.

terrible finances for farmers but hardly expensive food.

So close to figuring it out…

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1 point
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18 points

If your competition cost more then you can raise your prices too!

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-17 points

Most food in the US is domestically produced, so no. The US is a huge exporter of food outside of specialty goods and tropical things.

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3 points
*

It’s literally how capitalism works, so yes. They don’t care if it’s “mean.” They will ALWAYS price things as high as they can, and they will push it as far as they possibly can before sales start to dip.

If it’s a publicly traded company, they will literally oust you as CEO if you aren’t doing this because you’d be leaving money on the table.

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10 points
*

You’re not giving capitalism enough credit. Corporations and businesses are not altruistic. If they can get away with slowly raising prices to increase profit margins, they will.

That’s a hell of a lot easier to actually achieve when you don’t have foreign produce acting as competition and consequently sanity-checking domestic prices. Foreign suppliers implicitly set a ceiling for how much a product can cost since the market would shift to using them if they became the cheaper option.

To make matters worse, tariffs are a very nice excuse for retailers to raise prices across the board using the excuse that “it costs us more to get it, so it has to cost you more to buy it.” If we’re lucky, they’ll raise foreign goods by the exact amount they’re paying more for them and only choose to raise domestic good prices (for profit) by only some fraction of that amount.

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3 points

Either a bot or: Tell me you played sportsball in a small town highschool without telling me you played sportsball in a small town in highschool!

Whoever let gave you a passing grade in economics only did it so you could ahoot the game winning 3 point score.

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1 point

There is more supply than needed, we normally make so much we export huge quantities. How does restricted food exports increase prices domestically?

The comments about capitalism and price gouging and stuff are all fine and correct. But that would logically apply whether the exports were restricted or not. But they have to do something with all the food they were going to export or not. Sometimes they’ll just burn it or dump milk but they can probably sell, just at a lower price or pay more to ship it farther away. Now long term yes if these farmers go out of business then prices could increase if the supply shrinks but that doesn’t really apply to this year.

The problem with the reasoning I see here is that you lot are taking things you heard and applying them to this situation, but you just say capitalism and that’s the end of your argument. Supply and demand still affect prices, especially on a large scale and with commodity goods.

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