Biden calls out ‘shrinkflation’ as part of a broader strategy to reframe how voters view the economy

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden goes all-in and calls for ‘shrinkflation’.

The term refers to a seemingly secret way in which companies can increase their prices by reducing the size of their products even slightly. Suddenly there are fewer pretzels in the bag, less toothpaste in the tube and shorter bars.

“It’s called shrinkflation,” Biden said in his State of the Union address on Thursday evening. “You get charged the same amount and you have about, I don’t know, 10% less Snickers in it.”

The president’s focus on contraction-flation is part of a broader strategy to reshape the way voters think about the economy ahead of the November election. Biden is trying to deflect criticism of high prices and instead place the blame on big business.

He also tries to show ordinary people that he is fighting for them as he struggles to convince the public that the economy has become stronger under his leadership.

He addressed the problem of shrinkflation in a video released on Super Bowl Sunday and highlighted a social media post by the “Sesame Street” character Cookie Monster in which he complained about smaller cookies.

The low unemployment rate of 3.7% and record 16 million applications to start new businesses have been largely overlooked by voters, who are left hanging on higher food and housing prices after inflation rose by 9.0% in June 2022. 1% had reached a four-decade high. Even as inflation has fallen to 3.1% per year, consumers are still concerned about paying a premium in supermarkets.

“Joe Biden recognizes that high food prices are a political ‘Achilles heel,’” said Ryan Bourne, an economist at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. “When consumers go into the grocery store, they remember paying more than they did in 2019.”

But Bourne warned that, as an alternative, companies could have simply raised their list prices without shrinking inflation, potentially further upsetting consumers and damaging the president’s approval on the issue. Only 34% of American adults say they approve of how Biden has handled the economy, according to polling from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

“A number of companies did that because they thought their customers would rather do this than pay higher prices,” Bourne said. “So I think the president has to be very careful what he wishes for when he says he thinks contraction inflation is unfair.”

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Alabama, delivered the Republican Party’s response to the State of the Union, placing the blame for inflation solely on Biden.

“His reckless spending has dug our economy into a hole and sent the cost of living through the roof – the worst inflation in 40 years,” Britt said.

Republicans have claimed that prices rose as a result of Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package, even though the price increases were also global in nature. That’s a sign that broken supply chains and higher energy and food prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have played a role.

In a report published Wednesday, liberal economic advocacy group Groundwork Collaborative dug into inflation rates published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and documented evidence of contraction inflation. This showed that this has played a meaningful but modest role in the higher prices since 2019.

More than 7% of the increase in coffee prices was due to reduced packaging. About 10% of the higher prices for snacks and household paper products were due to contraction inflation. And for a president who loves ice cream, about 7% of the inflation for that product came from contraction inflation.

Companies may have masked the higher prices from customers but were honest with investors when it came to profit figures, the report said. Some companies, such as General Mills, have also proposed smaller package sizes as a way to manage their own costs and address the challenge of climate change.

Snack company Utz has shaved its chip bags by half an ounce to 9 ounces, the report said. It pulled two ounces worth of pretzels from its pretzel jars, with the CEO announcing to stock analysts that he was able to manage what the industry calls “price pack architecture.” PepsiCo has reduced the size of its Frito Scoops bags, Gatorade bottles and Doritos bags.

“Why we’re seeing this now is because contraction inflation is a late-stage ‘greed inflation’ – when you’ve gone as far as you can go in raising prices and consumers can’t stomach another increase,” said Linsday Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Cooperative. “It’s much more deceptive than an increase in list price.”

Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pennsylvania, has introduced a bill that would ban shrinkage by directing the Federal Trade Commission to treat it as an unfair or deceptive practice, allowing the government to impose civil penalties on companies that do so.

Biden fully endorsed the measure in his speech.

“Pass Bobby Casey’s bill and stop this,” he said.