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Strategies & Market Trends : The Epic American Credit and Bond Bubble Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bond_bubble who wrote (67027)7/28/2006 4:56:51 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
The trend you noticed is a real trend Jay - CNBC reported on it a few weeks ago and I posted in the following message - in some states they went after the grocers:

Message 22537585

Grocery Unit Size - Stealth Inflation

CNBC just had some emails from a grocery chain VP who said he has seen the unit size of many grocery products shrink across the chain - IE a can of TUNA used to be 6.5 ounces but now is 6 ounces.

Here are some older articles on the issue:

ourcivilisation.com

Tricks Used To Hide Grocery Product Downsizing
The Courier-Mail, Saturday, 6th May, 2000
Enlarge the rims on the bottom and top of tin cans while increasing the hollow area under the can to disguise the reduced capacity.
Change the way biscuits are arranged inside plastic packaging to reduce the number of biscuits that can fit into the new configuration.
Reduce the number of sheets on a toilet roll or roll of paper hand towels.
Change the weight of a product only marginally so the packaging can remain the same .
Change the shape of a bottle so that it appears to be larger than other products with the same volume.
Keep the height of a bottle or can the same but reduce its diameter marginally.
Make the opening on a tube of toothpaste larger so that consumers unintentionally use more toothpaste.

who knows Farmers are probably already quitting farming (PPI higher than CPI) as it is not profitable

AS I have said many times - here in Fl there are many orange groves with oranges ROTTING on the trees - I go byy and get the free oranges before they rot if I can. The farmers all became realtors and the land sits unsold I guess - hehe.

Last night I priced bananas - publix 49 a pound, whole foods type place (very upscale grocery store) 59 a pound, local farmers market guy down the corner from me, 69 cent a pound - he cannot compete on price with megacrop grocery chain. I don't expect him to stay in business for long if the upscale whole foods grocery store can undercut him.

ly be considered for real goods as they are also INELASTIC constrained by the ability to UNEARTH the goods. Service industries are generally very elastic.

See with technological advancement we can eat our dead soylent green style, use nuclear power plants to turn lead to gold, and do all kinds of amazing things not having to use john henry and his pickaxe to dig a hole.

Most of this power has got to be consumed in new houses,

New house - yes - I will comment on this in second post.



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67027)7/28/2006 4:59:50 PM
From: shades  Respond to of 110194
 
Iraqi homes show US how to build

power demand has gone up 25% and peak demand is up 40% in California. Most of this power has got to be consumed in new houses

(shades doesn't understand why we don't build more underground cities - dirt makes great insulation eh?)

english.aljazeera.net

By Adam Porter

Friday 04 February 2005, 22:10 Makka Time, 19:10 GMT


Some modern buildings will not stand the test of global warming

As global warming increases, America and the West may well need the Middle East.

Not just for its plentiful natural resources, but for its buildings.

The public may be unfamiliar with ancient air-conditioning systems such as windcatchers and ice-cooling, but these Middle Eastern technologies are exactly what may be needed in a hotter, more unpredictable climate.

Sue Roaf, professor of architecture at Oxford Brookes University, is co-author of a new book Adapting Buildings and Cities For Climate Change. Her study focuses on the ways buildings have to change as global warming intrudes further on everyday life.

Windcatchers, for example, are ancient ventilation and cooling systems, and are used widely in one very famous city, Baghdad.

"In Baghdad, where the temperature in summer gets up to 50C, windcatchers provide a source of conditioned fresh air by passing it through high, narrow shafts before entering the basement," says Roaf.

"They cool the internal structure of the house, the walls and floors at night by removing heat from the building, making it cooler internally during the day."

Kurdish ice

Another system, ice-cooling, was once widely used in western cities and societies. Now largely forgotten, it was first recorded as a coolant more than 4000 years ago. Where? On the plains of northern Iraq. The Ancient Greeks, Romans, Chinese and South Americans all used ice to cool a wide range of items, primarily housing.

The importance of the cooling properties of ice as a social and political tool were also widely noted. An example used by Roaf is the explorer JJ Tschudi who travelled in Peru between 1838 and 1842. He noted that if the ice caravans from the mountains were ever to be interrupted "it might excite popular ferment".

In northern Iraq, Kurdish communities widely used, and continue to use, natural ice. The ice is stored in pits for use in summer, the original ice having been cut and transported from the mountains of northern Mesopotamia.

Basra riots

"If only the British troops in Iraq had known, they might have been able to fly in Kurdish ice to cool the citizens of Basra in the scorching summer of 2003," says Roaf.


Soaring temperatures added to
tensions in Basra

"When the inhabitants of that beleaguered city had no electricity to cool their homes, in temperatures of over 50C, rioting broke out in the streets demonstrating the political importance of cooling."

Ice houses for cooling were used even in colder countries such as the United Kingdom. The last recorded delivery of Norwegian Wenham ice to the UK was in 1936. But they were also widely used in what is now Iraq, Iran and Syria from ancient times.

"The ice houses were opened on the salad days of summer," writes Roaf. "To provide ice for the kitchen, the invalid, the ambassador's salon, the greenhouse and the dining table. 'Let them unseal the ice of Qatara and make sure the ice is guarded,' wrote a provincial governor of Northern Assyria to his wife in 1800BCE."

An American dilemma

One problem in planning housing to cope with global warming is understanding how much the climate will change.

Roaf devotes part of her book to looking at the way the United States has refused to come on board with global warming.


Some traditional homes in Iraq
are cooled without using power

Instead of planning sustainable housing, it satisfies pent-up demand with cheap, lightweight, easy-to-construct housing creating solid profits for the powerful construction industry. These energy-inefficient houses help to suck up the 50% of the entire US energy demand. The 50% that goes into powering buildings.

Much of this energy goes on air-conditioning which uses up more electricity year on year. Air-conditioning demand is a significant factor in rising US energy use, increasing oil imports and electricity blackouts such as those of August 2003.

"The American building type, with its use of inefficient air-conditioning systems and thin, tight-skinned, unshaded, over-glazed, no-weight buildings is being exported to many countries and being imposed on some, like Iraq," says Roaf.

This style of cheap housing not only adds to global warming by losing heat but also exposes the American public to future problems.

"The American people will be left, when the lights do go out in extreme weather events, trying to survive in highly vulnerable buildings, highly exposed."

Leaked memos

This assessment is backed up by the perceived attitude of the US administration to global warming.


America has dragged its feet
over emissions legislation

"The White House position that mandatory restrictions on emissions should not be countenanced until further research is undertaken is a popular line from the administration," says Roaf.

"Meanwhile the clock ticks on and more Americans lose their lives to the climate."

Roaf concludes that this attitude is exemplified by comments from leading Republican consultant Frank Lutz who said the Republicans have "lost the environmental communications battle".

In a leaked memo, Lutz writes: "Voters believe there is no consensus about global warming within the scientific community. Should the public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their view about global warming will change accordingly."

The latest scientific findings not only proclaim that global warming is happening, but happening significantly faster than was expected. If this is the case, it may not be long before Americans such as Lutz throw out their air-conditioning and look to Iraq for ways to cool their homes.

Adapting Buildings and Cities for Climate Change, Sue Roaf with David Crichton & Fergus Nicol. Published by the Architectural Press www.architecturalpress.com
ISBN 0750659114.



To: bond_bubble who wrote (67027)7/28/2006 5:16:26 PM
From: Tommaso  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110194
 
The McDonald caramel sundae that they sell for $1.00 is about 60% the size it was two years ago. The small fries are now the size of the children's fries that they put in the Happy Meal.

If you don't believe me, ask Warren Buffet and Bill Gates. <G>