CallMeKate
Well-known Member
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic US
Ya know, Ted... I wish I could say I didn't believe that, but....I think I read something about the price of air is going to go up too...![]()
Ya know, Ted... I wish I could say I didn't believe that, but....I think I read something about the price of air is going to go up too...![]()
My mother used to say about high prices: "The air is free and the life is cheap."Ya know, Ted... I wish I could say I didn't believe that, but....@Ted01
And there is home stead excemption, reductions for age, disability, veterans, freezes and appeals ... .R/E taxes went up two years ago and are still the same. They went up to allegedly help pay for the new school. I have my thoughts as to why retired people should help pay for a new school but my thoughts don’t count.
HO insurance went up so horribly I had to raise the deductible to $2,000 and I still pay in the four digits with never having had a claim.
What did go down was the price of propane. Last year it was $2.92/gal. This last fill up two or so weeks ago was $2.85/gal. A huge help as the tank is 500 gallons.
Gas at the pump has gone down.
Anything “grocery” has gone up. My best deals overall are at Kroger.
Dog food and horse feed are the same as a year ago so I expect that will be changing soon.
I was really lucky to get a line on some great horse hay for $10/50# square; $13 per bale delivered and stacked. That’s what I’ve been paying the last 2-3 years for quality weed free horse hay, if I went after it and paid to have it stacked.
It now costs me the same amount of money to care for two horses at home than it did for four horses at home when we retired here 21 years ago. I’m sure there are those who think I should get rid of the horses and I will when the elder horse passes on and the younger one goes back to his real owner. If I’m going to be broke, broke is going to involve a horse until his final days.
As far as I can tell via search engine just now, nothing has been signed or enacted, but I could be missing something. I've been intentionally avoidant of national (Washington, DC) news since the election.I hope so too but I doubt it as it’s scheduled for 3 countries on February 1. Plus it was done last time he was in charge. He loves tariffs.
That's what I thought also. Nothing I buy or use has gone down in price.I think the question was more along the line of coming down for consumers.
Seems like the only reference to the OP's question is yours. I don't remember the price of these before, but the price now seems reasonable.Primers have gone down.
Lucky you on your car insurance coming down $30....mine went up $30 on my over 20 yr old VW bug. Still waiting to hear about my homeowner's insurance.My car insurance actually went down by $30 per month with this last billing, so that's something.
Not looking forward to the energy bills. We have been below freezing the last 3 nights and TXU Energy has already alerted me that my usage is up by 39%. My gas bill just came in and it is twice what it has been. I am only comforted by the fact that it will be next to nothing in the summer.
Primers have gone down.
"Trickle down economics" doesn't work either. It benefits only the wealthy.
As usual, you presume incorrectly.I'm still trying not to spew coffee laughing at "reliable news sources."
I presume this means the ones laying off staff and on the chopping block themselves because audiences have caught on and fled in droves. But they all get by through catering to confirmation bias.
Rather than waiting to be led by the nose you might consider believing your own eyes. This is pretty easy and you can start by opening them.
Inflation is a rate of change. When it is zero prices only stay the same, they don't fall. Deflation was already mentioned above.
No, but several of my friends and acquaintances may be in for a rude awakening.Nathan, if the price on insulin increases in the U.S., will that directly affect you or anyone in your household?
Count your blessings, propane is $4.50/gal delivered here, last year was $6.50/gal. Alfalfa hay is $27 per bale....R/E taxes went up two years ago and are still the same. They went up to allegedly help pay for the new school. I have my thoughts as to why retired people should help pay for a new school but my thoughts don’t count.
HO insurance went up so horribly I had to raise the deductible to $2,000 and I still pay in the four digits with never having had a claim.
What did go down was the price of propane. Last year it was $2.92/gal. This last fill up two or so weeks ago was $2.85/gal. A huge help as the tank is 500 gallons.
Gas at the pump has gone down.
Anything “grocery” has gone up. My best deals overall are at Kroger.
Dog food and horse feed are the same as a year ago so I expect that will be changing soon.
I was really lucky to get a line on some great horse hay for $10/50# square; $13 per bale delivered and stacked. That’s what I’ve been paying the last 2-3 years for quality weed free horse hay, if I went after it and paid to have it stacked.
It now costs me the same amount of money to care for two horses at home than it did for four horses at home when we retired here 21 years ago. I’m sure there are those who think I should get rid of the horses and I will when the elder horse passes on and the younger one goes back to his real owner. If I’m going to be broke, broke is going to involve a horse until his final days.
More "trickle down" theory BS. Why not focus on reality and what is likely, rather than subjective fantasy?In theory at least, tariffs raise the cost of foreign goods intentionally in order to give domestic competitors a chance. Ideally this means more and better jobs which in turn fund roads, schools, etc. The tariffs can be used to fund Federal government, replacing some or all of the Federal income tax and another win for society and families and individuals.
From that article:
I believe this will happen too....the thing I worry most about.Buckle up because after February 1 prices will climb. Other countries will have to retaliate with tariffs and it’s going to sink both our economy and the economies of some of the countries we put tariffs on according to economists.