My daughter said that most things in their school canteen just jumped by 30% this week, with the school feebly disguising it as a "new menu launch" (same mediocre food, renamed, loads more expensive). It doesn't really affect us, as most days I send her with a pack-up. But the kids on free school dinners get £2.50 a day, which used to be enough for a break time snack plus lunch. Now it doesn't even cover the cheapest hot meal, leaving the most deprived kids with a choice of an industrial sandwich every day, or eating a proper meal but only four days of the week. What really boils my piss is that knowing how much cheaper bulk cooking is, anyone with a modicum of culinary skill should be able to make a nutritious meal for a load of school kids for under £2 a portion, even taking into account current energy costs.
We're being told inflation over the last year is about 10%. Somehow my shop spending has managed to go up about 30%, even with being more careful than ever.
A couple of weeks ago I changed from getting dog food to cat food. Quite a bit cheaper……….but not as tasty.
Is that for a litre? I bought some in M&S of all places for £6 in the autumn but it's sadly coming to an end and I'm guessing that the next bottle will be considerably more than that.
And the other old favourite trick of retailers. Whiskas cat food has "rebranded" so a new picture on the box, and the same price - but the size of each pouch has reduced from 100g to 85g. So really a ~15% increase for the same price and hungry cats.
I forgot to mention that according to Rees-Mogg, we can now remove the “funny” distance countdown signs from the Dartford tunnel. Living the post brexit dream!
Tesco gnocchi. Was 60p went up to 75p then disappeared for a bit. It's back. At £2. Also 4 BirdsEye battered Cod now at £6.05. On offer at Sainsbury's at £4.