I hate that you can go to a small gas station if it's nearby and get a gallon of milk for $3.50 but I just saw a quart for $2.69 at Petro. That's $10.76 a gallon. That's rural Alaska winter prices. It's insane.
Milk prices are outrageous.
Discussion in 'Truck Stops' started by Tb0n3, Jun 19, 2018.
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And yet, the farmers producing the milk are going bankrupt around here.
Blackshack46, jsnell, buddyd157 and 3 others Thank this. -
I don't mind those milk prices as much as I do cereal and other basic grocery item prices. But you're comparing convenience store high side quart prices to grocery store low side gallon prices and that's not fair.
tommymonza and rabbiporkchop Thank this. -
When comparing the value of the dollar in 1970 and the price of milk in 1970 to the value of the dollar today
(or lack thereof) and the price of milk today, it seems cheap.
It should be about $27.00 per gallon adjusted for inflation.
The squeeze tightens on milk price buying power
on milk price buying power
When adjusted for inflation, the 41-year trend for producer prices is awful.
BY HOARD'S DAIRYMAN STAFF @hoardsdairyman
How does $3 milk sound?
Ridiculous of course, yet the effective buying power that U.S. dairy producers have had for over 20 years has been even less when Class III prices are adjusted for inflation back to 1970 values. Here's something even more ridiculous: effective prices have occasionally been closer to $2.
![[IMG]](proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fhoards.com%2Fimages%2Fprice-table.6816.jpg&hash=e7576dbb7bd065a4d6e8cb784235acd9)
Milk price buying power peaked at $5.83 in 1979, but it's been downhill ever since. Since 1990, the 1970-equivalent producer milk price has averaged just $2.91 per hundredweight. Some years it fared extremely badly, such as in 2000, 2002, and 2006. The financial meltdown year of 2009 was the worst so far.
Here's what we would see today if the price of things in 1970 had kept up with the rate of inflation, rather than exceeding it:
• U.S. No. 1 hay (about $34 per ton in 1970) would be $200 today.
• Corn (about $1 per bushel in 1970) would be $5.87 today.
• A gallon of regular gasoline (about 36 cents in 1970) would be $2.11 today.
• A 1st Class postage stamp (six cents in 1970) would be 35 cents today.
Of course, some prices have failed to keep up with inflation. One is incredibly frustrating to producers; others are a relief:
- Basic milk prices ($4.66 in 1970) should be $27.34 today.
- Cull cows (about 23 cents per pound in 1970) should be $1.35 per pound today.
- Top Holstein cows (about $575 in 1970) would be $3,374 today.
- A gallon of milk (about $1.15 in 1970) would be $6.75 today.
- A pound of round steak (about $1.30 in 1970) would be $7.63 today.
- If the federal minimum wage of $1.60 per hour had kept up with inflation, it would be $9.39 today instead of $7.25.
speedyk, gokiddogo, Oldironfan and 3 others Thank this. -
And? $10.76 is still way overkill and people aren't making nearly as much as they were in the past. What's your point? Note your own source says milk was $6.75 adjusted for inflation.
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That says that our ancestors paid way too much for their milk.
I would never spend 27 bucks for a gallon of milk like they used to.speedyk Thanks this. -
If you want to carry milk, my suggestion is to buy UHT pastuerized, shelf stable product.
They sell a brand at the Dollar Tree around here for a dollar a quart, but there are other outlets carrying it, too, if you start looking.
Just less hassle, and you pay dearly for quarts of homogenized nearly anywhere.
I don't want to talk about the dairy business, it's a sore subject for me.Oldironfan Thanks this. -
Most of that milk from a box is made in Logan, Utah. Its pretty good. They make cheeses to.
Gossner Foods | Homerabbiporkchop and 25(2)+2 Thank this. -
Keep going north a few miles there is a meat seller. And across the street from that is a Pepridge Farm cookie plant, they sell cookies that are damaged by the pound.
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Here in California I'm paying $2.99 a gallon for their store brand at Safeway. Locally produced milk is $6.99 and organic is $8.99. The cheap stuff is fine with me. And like somebody else said, the dairy ranchers are always on the verge of bankruptcy.
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