• vortic@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’ve been thinking of a solution for this. What if products were required to be sold in standard increments. No 11.2 floz, either 6 floz or 12 floz. No 960 grams, only increments of 250 grams up to 1 kg, then increments of 1 kg. It would make product comparison much easier and make it obvious when shrinkflation is happening.

    • Beryl@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      It’s mandatory to display the price per kg or L in France, which makes comparing the value much easier.

      • vortic@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        It actually is here in the US, too. At least in my state. It would still be helpful for monitoring for inflation as a consumer if sizes were fixed so that the actual price changes when the price per unit changes. For me it’s a lot easier to recognize that something went from $4.99/kg to $5.99/kg when the item is fixed at 1 kg than it is to recognize when the item went from 830 g to 691 g but remained $4.14.

    • Grumpy@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      This type of mandate exists in specific industries. I’m really not sure why it doesn’t exist in other.

    • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      This is a solved problem, in other areas of the world.

      I would avoid 250g, that just means you have to multiply and divide by 4, which is more of a pain than multiples of 10.

      In Australia, all food and grocery products (other than fresh produce by unit, like 1 avocado), must be labelled by weight, volume, or other suitable metric (number of toilet paper sheets, for example) by a suitable multiple of 10.

      Spices, x$/10g, vegetables x$/kg, other stuff per 100/g. Whatever results in a reasonable $ number.

      Even if it’s different it’s hilariously easy to compare.

      This can of tomatoes $0.70/100g, is cheaper than $8/kg fresh tomatoes, easy peasy because you just move the decimal.

      It really is nice, sorry to rub salt in the wound 😅