Gobble, gobble, gulp! Food prices put the bite on U.S. Thanksgiving
feast
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[November 17, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Let the sticker
shock begin: The upcoming U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, a time when
families and friends typically celebrate with groaning sideboards, a
stuffed turkey, and a more-is-better-than-less attitude, is going to
cost roughly 20% more than last year, according to estimates compiled by
the American Farm Bureau Federation in an annual survey of grocery
prices.
Blame it on the weather, Russia's invasion of Ukraine or corporations'
drive to maximize profits, all of which have had a hand in rising food
prices, but this year's jump is the largest since the Farm Bureau's
first Thanksgiving dinner cost survey in 1986.
Coupled with last year's 14% increase, which was the second-largest, the
price of a "classic" meal of turkey, stuffing, green peas, sweet
potatoes, cranberries, rolls and pumpkin pie for 10 people has risen
more than a third since 2020, at the outset of the worst U.S. inflation
surge in 40 years, from $46.90 to $64.05.
"That kind of increase we recognize is a burden on some families, no
question about that," said Roger Cryan, the Farm Bureau's chief
economist, though he noted that discounting as the holiday approaches
may allow consumers to lower the bill.
U.S. consumer prices rose 7.7% on an annual basis in October and had
been increasing by as much as 9.1% earlier this year, triggering a
Federal Reserve effort to tame price pressures with aggressive interest
rate increases.
Food prices, particularly items bought for home consumption, have risen
even faster, hitting a 13.5% annual rate in August and still rising
12.4% annually last month, a shock to one part of the household budget
where prices had dependably increased less than incomes.
As food prices have risen, a U.S Census survey showed the share of
households reporting food scarcity rising from 7.8% in August 2021 to
11.4% as of early October.
"If you're in the grocery store right now, you see it, in any grocery
store you go to, people making tradeoffs," San Francisco Fed President
Mary Daly said last week. "How many people can they invite? What are
they going to serve? Are they going to trade down? Are we having a
different kind of meal? Are we not having as many options?"
SKIP THE STUFFING?
As with other goods and services, there is a broad set of forces behind
the Thanksgiving food spike.
An outbreak of avian flu cut turkey flocks, and while supply is adequate
the Farm Bureau said the harvest of smaller birds along with higher feed
prices has raised the cost of that Thanksgiving centerpiece by 21%, to
an average $1.81 per pound in the 224 stores where surveyors checked
prices during the Oct. 18-31 period.
That accounted for about half of the $10.74 increase in the full price
of the classic meal this year. The largest percentage rise was for
packaged stuffing, up 69% to $3.88, while a 1-pound tray of carrots and
celery was up just 8%, to $0.88, and the price of cranberries fell 14%,
to $2.57 for a 12-ounce bag.
For food items generally, key inputs like fuel and fertilizer prices
have skyrocketed, said Wendiam Sawadgo, an agricultural economics
professor at Auburn University, with some fruit farmers in Alabama, for
example, now spending $1,000 an acre on fertilizer compared to around
$600 in 2018.
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Frozen turkeys are pictured in a freezer
case in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S.,
November 19, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
"A big chunk was Ukraine and Europe not having fertilizer production
for a good while. That was a big problem," he said.
Grocery store margins also rose during the COVID-19 pandemic. Net
profit after taxes hit 3% in 2020 and 2.9% in 2021, compared with an
average of around 1.2% from 2015 through 2019, according to data
from the Food Industry Association. Those were the highest margins
the association has seen in reports dating back to 1984.
Andy Harig, a vice president at the association, said high demand
for food at home early in the pandemic, when restaurants were closed
or in-person dining was considered risky, gave food retailers
leverage to boost profits. He said consumers also bought more
higher-margin products like seafood during the crisis, while changes
in shopping - including the rise in food delivery - let stores trim
labor costs.
But he also said the net profit figure is expected to fall back to
the long-run industry average of between 1% and 2%.
"It's a penny industry," Harig said. With restaurants recovering and
wages rising, margins are likely already declining.
LAST-MINUTE BARGAINS
Still, the rising cost of necessities has been top of mind for U.S.
officials, with consumer sentiment near a low point after a year
when average gas prices reached $5 a gallon. Thanksgiving-related
travel this year may at least be cheaper than it was, with airline
and fuel prices having declined recently.
And there may be some respite on the food front as well.
Walmart Inc, for example, said earlier this month that it would
leave prices for Thanksgiving staples unchanged from last year and
keep them in effect through Christmas, including turkey for under $1
a pound.
Discounted turkey prices often lure consumers to grocery stores and
supermarkets, and bargains intensify as the holiday approaches. The
Farm Bureau noted that frozen turkey prices had fallen to 95 cents a
pound as of this week.
Auburn's Sawadgo said that shopping for alternatives can also bring
down the cost, with one of his personal favorites, collard greens,
selling right now at $1.14 a pound, down 3 cents from last year,
according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.
Sawadgo recently priced the goods for a Thanksgiving dinner for six
at about $70.76, up 19% from $59.50 for the same basket last year.
"If you are not someone who shops the ads, this might be the year to
do that," he said.
(Additinal reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul
Simao)
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