▲ | deeg 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tariffs raise the price in tangential ways. Tariffs on Chinese steel means US chicken wire producers switch to more expensive US sources. Increased demand for US sources make it even more expensive. Farmers buy the more expensive chicken wire, passing the added expense to McDonalds, which passes it on to you. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | ivape 6 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The chicken nuggets were edging past $5 dollars before the tariffs, during the Biden era. Mcdonalds owns Chipotle so they are well aware of premium pricing for regular food. They applied the same pattern to Mcdonalds, the same way Starbucks once convinced everyone coffee can be as much as $8. This is all before tariffs. No one's giving tariffs a pass, but we are giving regular people a pass for some reason. It takes people to do all of this. To further my point, the Gap owns Old Navy and Banana Republic. It's all the same material mostly, but it's tiered pricing (Old Navy cheapest, Gap, to Banana Republic most expensive). Over time, they raised the floor of pricing at Old Navy. Financial engineering is not just happening in the stock market. The floor for prices on certain things have just gone up with no real reason other than "its about time we raised these prices", and it's happening in a collective way. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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