Phil Retevy, chief economist in the Freight forwarding company based on San Francisco, has predictions when the US supply chain returns to normal: around next year, earlier. “This is not possible in 2022,” he told the New York Times this week, an estimate that brought all kinds of implications. From the extent to which the price of food will continue to increase – for goods ranging from fresh products, to coffee and milk – and the extent to which voters can punish petellings in the middle semester of the fall semester.
In the event that the pandemic becomes a storm and determines so many moving crises, of course there are aspects of public health. But when you move to a concentric circle outside the vaccine, hospital care, and the number of Covid cases, you enter the lagging indicator of the impact of the pandemic. Like, stimulus examination and government assistance. And a confusing job market, which includes everything from what is called “resignation” and a lot of desired signs of signs, to several businesses such as restaurants reduce their operating hours due to lack of staff. And then there is a grocery store experience.
Grocery prices 2022
A woman is shown pushing a cart full of food ingredients. Image source: wavebreakmediamicro / adobe Among the frustration encountered by the buyer? Lack of popular products, for one thing. Distributors have experienced labor problems, including fewer workers and also sick workers, and so many have cut shipping to several stores accordingly. Shoppers, meanwhile, also faced price increases, which are products from everything starting from supply chains to inflation and public labor problems. Data from the USDA, for example, explained that buyers must absorb around 6% increase in monthly food costs in 2021.