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Honey, someone shrunk the roll of Bounty

Posted Jun 26 2008, 01:51 PM by Karen Datko
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"LivingAlmostLarge" at the blog with the same name read an article about how manufacturers of food and sundry items are shrinking the size of their products and charging the same price. She found the proof in her own cupboards.

She wrote that "curiosity got the better of me and I started to pull through my cabinets.  And Bounty did decrease the roll size. I can say that because I have some from last summer." Bounty isn't the only product that's smaller now.

Our buddy Nickel at FiveCentNickel reported the same thing about ice cream: "I'm not sure if you've noticed, but over the past couple of years, 'half-gallon' ice cream containers have dropped from 2 quarts (an actual half-gallon) to 1.75 quarts to (most recently) 1.5 quarts. All without a price decrease."

According to an article in USA Today, that first drop in size happened five years ago. We didn't notice, and neither did LivingAlmostLarge and, we're sure, lots of other shoppers.

With companies dealing with higher energy and commodity prices, the article says, "Raising prices when strapped consumers are price-sensitive can be a formula for disaster. That's why there's often less in the box instead."

Other shrinking products include some brands of cereal, bar soap, snack foods and, yes, Bounty (a company spokeswoman said each sheet is now thicker and better). For more information about products that have been downsized, we recommend you read the entire USA Today story.

When consumers of Dreyer's ice cream complained, the company responded that it had to chose between a higher price -- $7 for a carton -- and a smaller container. Some unhappy customers will switch brands, but generally consumers prefer the latter, the article says. After all, how many people would pay $7 for ice cream?

We like LivingAlmostLarge's response: "I guess I'll be more aware now of the size of goods I am buying, even when on 'sale.'"

Comments

 

I recently took notice that the ceral boxes are smaller.  Once I was on to that trick, I went to the store to by Dreyers ice cream.  I couldn't find the normal package I was used to, I had two still in my freezer.  Now, they seem to have shrunk their packaging as well.  I have a surprise for all of these vendors, I'm not buying your product anymore.  I will either wait for a sale and even then if I don't have a coupon, I won't buy it.

I noticed this downsizing months ago on toilet paper rolls. The advertising claims thicker sheets, etc but the rolls themselves are now smaller by at least an inch. Check for yourself the next time you put a roll on the toilet paper dispenser See how much room you have on either side of the roll inside the holder. What a crazy world we live in!

My mother pointed out a few years ago that yogurt stopped coming in 8 oz containers. It's now 6 oz, and I'm just waiting for it to become 4 oz. I'm ready to start making my own, the way my parents did in the 70's. And, in addition to shrinking the amounts, they don't put replaceable lids on them anymore. You get a foil cover, which wouldn't matter unless you have a four year old who only eats half.

It's crap! Pay more for less!  Give me a break! So with a husband and 3 kids 200.00 a week is not even filling up the cart anymore, and now they are making the packs smaller and the price bigger?!  We have cut all but the bare necessities from our house.  I can't believe with the economy tanking the way it is companies think it is ok to short us even further.  I understand their cost has gone up too, but really I don't think they are going out of business because of it. But it certainly makes a difference on the items I buy every week now. I agree with Karen C........ I'm not buying either!

I have  noticed this too, but the blatent of this happened to me a few weeks ago while buying dog food.  I buy the 37.5lb bag, always buy it at Petsmart, even though the regular price is more expensive than other stores, except maybe Petco, because of sales and petperk discounts, it is usually cheaper.  The last time I went to buy a bag the 37.5lb bag had shrunk to 34lbs, still at the same price of course.  Thinking that it was the manufacturer that shrunk the bag I bought it, begrudingly.  Fast foward a couple of weeks, in my local Target in the dog food aisle, there was my dog food in the 37.5lb bag, so I check my local grocery store, again 37.5lb bag.  Suffice it to say, Petsmart just lost a loyal customer.  Even on sale, it is still cheaper per pound to buy the larger bag someplace else.  What I really hate about this is that the consumer isn't supposed to notice and normally I probably wouldn't, but its hard to hide 3.5 lbs.

Andy Rooney did a piece on pounds of coffee back in '03, which was a follow up from a report first done in 1988.  So apparently it's been going on awhile.  20 years in fact.  

Story here: www.cbsnews.com/.../main543240.shtml

Thanks for the mention.  

I don't think most of you are old enough to remember or know anything about the original shrinking phenomenon in the grocery store.  We used to get 3lb cans of coffee and one year Yuban came out with a scheme by claiming they had a new way of grinding the coffee so you could get the same amount of cups from 2.5lbs as the old 3lbs. I haven't purchased Yuban since.

Try finding a 5 pound bag of sugar.

Remember those?

Graham crackers too. Same price smaller cracker...

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