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June 17, 2025 2 mins

Right, let's deal to the economy. 

There were two interesting things yesterday. 

The first was the food price inflation number showed it is not contained. 

Why it is increasing beyond broad inflation is a many and varied thing, and the upside of these numbers is we can control them to a degree. 

You don’t have to buy chocolate, given cocoa is through the roof. 

You don’t have to buy butter, or a lot of dairy. 

Vegetables are up, but that is seasonal. Seasonal fruit and vegetables are always reasonably priced. 

Water though, which was the second thing, is not a luxury. Our bill arrived yesterday and, yet again, the price is going up, this time by 7%. 

It's like rates and electricity – they're all going up and they're all going up beyond the band of inflation. 

The trouble with this is severalfold. 

Firstly, this in and of itself is inflationary and it isn't productive. In other words, we are no better off. I still use the same water, it just costs more. 

Ideally what you want is more stuff done to produce the income to afford the bills. So if the cost of living is going up 3% and your income is going up 5%, we are okay and are ahead of the curve. 

This, sadly, is not happening. 

So we most likely have no growth driving the economy and yet we have increasing costs to operate that non-productive economy. That my friends is called stagflation. 

So, can we control Israel attacking Iran and the oil price spiking? No. 

Can we control the cost of the ship through troubled Middle Eastern waters? No. 

But can we control, to some degree, this incessant cost-plus accounting that’s going on domestically by people who got the taste of price increases during Covid and basically never stopped? You would hope so. 

This is a central Government thing, especially given a lot of these businesses, weather and power companies, water agencies, or councils have a major central Government input. 

If the banks were right yesterday upon the release of the services sector numbers when they said this was an economy in recession, again, price rises in food and water aren't helping what is becoming an alarmingly large hole. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's right for day three. Let's deal with the economy.

(00:02):
Two things happened to me yesterday. The food price inflation.
Will that happen to us all? Of course? The food
price inflation, it is not contained now, Why it's increasing
beyond broad inflation is a many invaried thing. And the
upside of these numbers is we can control them to
a degree. Think about it. You don't have to buy
chocolate given cocos through the roof. You don't have to
buy butter or a lot of dairy are veggies I

(00:23):
noted up this is seasonal seasonal fruit and veggies, though
generally are reasonably priced. Water, though, which was the second thing,
is not a luxury. Our bill arrived yesterday, yet again
the price is going up, this time over seven percent.
It's like the rates, it's like electricity. They're all going up,
and they're all going up beyond the band of inflation. Now,
the trouble with this is several fault. Firstly, it is
in and of itself inflationary, and it isn't productive. In

(00:45):
other words, we are no better off. I still use
the same water, it just cost more. Normally or ideally,
what you want is more stuff done to produce the
income to afford the bill. So the cost of living
is going up three percent and your income is going
up five percent. Where okay, head of the curve, This
sadly is not happening. So we have most likely no
growth driving the economy at the moment, and yet we

(01:07):
have increasing costs to operate that non productive economy that
my friends, is called stagflation. So can we control Israel
attacking Iran and the oil price spiking? No? Can we
control the cost of shipping through troubled Middle Eastern waters? No?
But can we control to some degree this incessant cost
plus accounting that's going on domestically by people who got

(01:27):
the taste of price increases during COVID and basically never stopped. Well,
you would hope so, because this is a government thing,
a central government thing, especially given a lot of these businesses,
whether the power companies or water agencies or councils, have
a major central government input. If the banks were right
yesterday upon the release of the services sected numbers when
they said this was an economy in recession, again, price

(01:49):
rises in food and water aren't helping what is becoming
an alarmingly large hole for more from the Mic Asking Breakfast.
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