I see in die Burger the is a news snippet saying Carte Blanche will make "shocking" revelations regarding the high food prices. May be a worth a look.
Will the uncovering lead to lower prices!? Clover milk is in the region of R23 now! (ps. I don't buy Clover milk)
Is that JHB prices? Here in DBN Clover 2ltr is +-R15
At Hypermarket Durban North, Clover Milk 2l fluctuates between R14-99 and R19-99 in the space of a week - and yet the dairy farmers are only paid about R3-00 per litre on a pre-negotiated contract - no fluctuation in the price for the term of the contract...
Well BBC said that JHB is the cheapest city in the world to be an expat in.
Tokyo is most expensive now, Osaka second, Moscow 3rd I think.
JHB mango price = ?
Tokyo mango = $25 USD
London mango = GBP 2.00 = USD $3.50
The BBC reporter did say that while chicken soup was only R33.99 in JHB,
most locals can't afford these prices. He redeemed himself at least with that.
and the ^^^ means what? Food prices vs income??? The gravy train still rides us to bitter ends...
It means food prices. It's for expats. If you gonna get paid the same in USD/Euro/GBP or Yen, choose JHB over Tokyo or Osaka.
The BBC guy did say that most people in SA can't even afford R33.99 for chicken soup here - which is an expensive chicken soup IMO.