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    23 commenti

    1. ExiledBastion on

      Why would they not have, when the cost of living crisis never got addressed?

    2. CassieBeeJoy on

      It could be because we’re not out of the cost of living crisis…

    3. do_or_pie on

      > Murphy said a recent trend was an uptick in people buying fresh food to cook more from scratch.

      Knowing the state of the nations’ health, you would hope this would be rising and taking over ready meals, but sadly not from these trends

    4. callsignhotdog on

      Not sure I agree with the premise that the cost of living crisis ever actually ended. Nothing came back down in price, they just stopped going up as fast.

    5. Reasonable-Client143 on

      Tesco’s are making huge profits by increasing prices and cutting the margins to their supplies.

      They (and the other supermarkets) are the problem.

    6. North_Still_2234 on

      The cost of living crisis didn’t start in 2022. It started in 2008 with austerity measures follow the government’s bail out of the banks.

      Don’t forget, kids, the fact that your salary is worth 20% less today than it did in 2008 is the fault of fat cat bankers. Not immigrants.

    7. Obscure-Oracle on

      Tesco revenue is increasing by roughly 5% year on year with around 8% per year rise in profits. The CEO doubled his pay in 2024 from £4.7m to £10m. So despite people continuing to be frugal, the company is doing better than you would expect, maybe they are part of the issue?

    8. HotelPuzzleheaded654 on

      *Tesco, whose share of Britain’s grocery market has grown to 28.4% – up 0.8 percentage points on the year – was seeing a continuing strengthening of the “dining in” trend, with consumers opting for premium supermarket products over a trip to a restaurant, partly to save cash. This is bad news for Britain’s beleaguered hospitality sector.*

      I’d wager that most of these people are opting for this over takeaways which now basically cost the same, and in some cases more than eating out if not at a fine dining establishment.

    9. SignalButterscotch73 on

      >”When we had the first cost of living crisis three years ago there was quite an adjustment in shopping habits at that stage and those habits have stuck,”

      Had? As in past tense? Rich guy delusion yet again.

      Everything is still bloody expensive and wages are still crap, there is currently a cost of living crisis, that has been going on since the end of the pandemic lockdowns at minimum.

    10. cooky561 on

      Almost like people with less money, spend less! -suprise pikachu-

      Tesco boss, you own a massive company, **be the change you want to see** by paying sharing your bonus amongst your staff, in the form of a raise.

    11. The price of the humble cucumber has doubled where I live in the Midlands. Seems like the “cost of living crisis” is still in its early stages?

    12. SignatureLabel on

      The crisis has only gotten worse? Our habits will get much worse I promisee you that.

    13. EnigmaT1m on

      I drink a lot of coffee. Many cups a day. Going back just 5 years I could easily get the 3 ingredients for under £5 (200g coffee would be £4 but usually I could find one on offer for £3. 4 pints milk would be £1.10 and a 1kg bag of sugar was 65-75p)

      In 2025? Jar of coffee is going for £8+ and is never on offer these days. You want that jar of coffee delivered? I’ve seen some stores charge over £12 (not inclusing delivery fees etc., that’s just the starting price), but let’s stick with £8 for my point. Bag of sugar costs £1-£1.10 and the milk as of two days ago is now going for £2.

      So something that cost less than a fiver 5 years ago now costs upwards of £11 and can cost £15-16 as part of a delivery order. I’m in my mid 40’s and I can’t recall any 5 year period where average grocery prices would more than double.

      Now, obviously there are a lot of factors here, Covid, Ukraine war and the ongoing cost of Brexit. Yet the boss of Tesco is surprised that we are actively trying to save money? We don’t have a choice, these superstores are constantly jacking up prices so, of course, we have to find ways to shop more frugally.

    14. Fast-Drummer5757 on

      Of course they stuck prices are still extortionate and only getting worse.

    15. NuggetKing9001 on

      Yeah, until it’s not a crisis, why would they change?

    16. Mental-Reference-719 on

      No idea why that might be.

      After all, we didn’t really get pre crisis prices back…

    17. What planet is he from? The cost of living crisis is still going on! It’s probably been getting worse actually. Moron

    18. Desnowshaite on

      The prices only went higher but salaries still haven’t, so that’s why.

    19. Original_Griever on

      “Tesco shocked that habits of UK populace when times were shit sticking when things are getting worse”.

    20. Euclid_Interloper on

      Is it a ‘habit’ if I just physically can’t afford to do shit anymore?

    21. BravelyMike on

      Bag for bag has the cost of groceries gone down this year or is this just a consumer adaptation to the standard trend of rising prices of goods and services?

    22. ApprehensiveChip8361 on

      Prices haven’t come down so of course habits have stuck. What a plonker.

    23. Twattymcgee123 on

      Really dislike the Tesco ethos , far worthier places to shop .
      Plus the quality of many things are substandard .

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