The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

9.33 euros for 16 products – Lidl receipt from 2002 causes astonishment

2024-03-26T18:25:19.187Z

Highlights: A man from Schleswig-Holstein posted a 22-year-old receipt on Facebook showing food prices from 2002. Back then you could buy a bag of potatoes for the equivalent of just 1.50 euros, whereas today you have to spend up to four euros for it. In the Rewe market, the current price for two kilos of potatoes is 2.79 euros - and is therefore almost four times as expensive as it was 22 years ago. Today it is rare for a receipt with 16 items to show less than 10 euros.9.33 euros for 16 products – Lidl receipt from 2002 causes astonishment.



As of: March 26, 2024, 7:10 p.m

By: Sofia Popovidi

Comments

Press

Split

A receipt from 2002 is causing a stir on Facebook.

The food prices listed there make the effects of inflation clear.

Bremen – When shopping, many consumers usually first look at the price – and then put one or two products back.

In recent years, food prices have almost exploded.

For some, fruit and vegetables have now become luxury goods.

A survey from 2022 showed that one in three Germans spends almost half of their salary on food.

According to data from the consumer advice center, the situation looked different 30 years ago: Back then you could buy a bag of potatoes for the equivalent of just 1.50 euros, whereas today you have to spend up to four euros for it.

The ongoing price increase is also a recurring topic on social media.

A receipt from 2002 recently caused a particular stir.

Potatoes for 0.79 cents: receipt from 2002 shows extreme price increase

Shopping is becoming more and more expensive: in 2002, a sack of potatoes cost less than one euro.

(Symbolic image/archive image) © Sven Simon/imago

A man from Schleswig-Holstein posted a 22-year-old receipt on Facebook showing food prices from 2002.

Two kilograms of potatoes for 0.79 euros, long-life milk for 0.55 euros and eggs for 0.65 euros - that's how cheap food was back then.

The receipt, which shows a total of 9.33 euros, comes from the man's mother.

He comments on his post with the words: “I compared today’s prices and was slightly horrified.”

Today it is rare for a receipt with 16 items to show less than 10 euros.

His wish is clear: “I want the prizes back.”

“Heavy”: Inflation hits consumers at the checkout

The reactions of other Facebook users to the cheap receipt are similar.

A woman commented with the expression: “Crazy”.

Another user writes: “Cheaper than these days”.

One user was particularly shocked by the low price of potatoes: “Heavy, two kilograms of potatoes cost 2.99 euros today.”

For comparison: In the Rewe market, the current price for two kilos of potatoes is 2.79 euros - and is therefore almost four times as expensive as it was 22 years ago.

The price tag at Lidl also shows something similar: instead of 0.79 euros, consumers now have to pay around 2.50 euros for a two-kilo bag of potatoes.

(spo)

My news

  • Sweater, park bench, daffodils: The hidden messages in Princess Kate's video reading

  • Seriously injured ski jumping ace with devastating bedside diagnosis

  • Bankruptcy of German industry giant: next traditional company goes bankrupt

  • “Dragon Fire” as a Ukraine game changer?

    Laser cannon hits “at the speed of light” read

  • “That’s disrespectful”: Civil servants earn as little as citizens’ benefit recipients – and the traffic lights are watching

  • 1 hour ago

    Bridge collapse in Baltimore: Authority names number of victims - Biden reacts read

The editor wrote this article and then used an AI language model for optimization at her own discretion.

All information has been carefully checked.

Find out more about our AI principles here.

Source: merkur

All life articles on 2024-03-26

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.