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avalancheGenesis's avatar

I too wouldn't touch grocery """price gouging""" with an eleven-foot pole, especially in litigious How Dare You Raise Egg Prices During Avian Flu California...but it sure would be nice to offer discounts on soon-to-be-unsaleables, scaling or otherwise. Even though there's a small tax break for donating food, and a smaller rebate for tossing stuff (I don't understand the mechanics there), there's a wide range of price points that'd capture meaningful value above those meagre percentages. Add in a final-sale clause to avoid returns and mitigate moral hazard*, and you're off to the races. Win-win for us on the grocer's end too: more leeway to order heavy inventory, less time spent processing intrinsically-annoying spillage. Recent Transparency Good(tm) law changes mean the state's gonna start auditing donation books, so the process has gotten significantly more cumbersome. Lotta things just get tossed in the bin rather than donated, because ain't nobody got thyme for that. Clear case of Beware Trivial Inconveniences in action.

The, uh, fundamental economic attribution error rings true. There was a giant company-wide raise equivalent to about 3 simultaneous normal raises earlier this year, and we're now offering life and disability insurance as well. Yet somehow coworkers don't tie this deserved increase in compensation to inflation, it must be "corporate greed" somehow. Same thing when rising commercial rents and the fast food minimum thing closed local restaurants..."Well Acktually in Europe these franchises pay more *and* their goods aren't that much more expensive, people are just greedy here"...right. I dunno how to convince someone who won't buy the evidence happening right in front of them.

*though again I can imagine unprincipled excepions being made here by consumer rights maximalists..."caveat emptor except where void or prohibited by law"

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Victor Chang's avatar

"Is a 6% growth in real median wages over 5 years as measured (which as I have noted elsewhere I think overstates things in practice even without interest rates) a ‘very good’ economy?"

How does it compare to real median wage growth in the rest of the world over the same period of time? And how does it compare to real median wage growth over a 5 year period in America over the last 30 years?

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