Why the cost increase?


I went to buy materials for a speaker project. I also priced some T-111 siding on 8" centers, 5/8 thick, Ship lap.
I hadn’t picked up any sheets or anything in over 18 months.

48" x 96 x 5/8 wood siding was 19-26.00 and on sale 15-20.00 per sheet, NOW 74-84.00 per sheet.

MDF 3/4" 48 x 96" if you can find it. 45-55.00 per sheet it was 22.00 to 27.00 per sheet.

2x4x8 DF stud grade 1.99-3.00 per. Now 4-6.00 per stud,

There is no shortage but there sure is a LOT of price gouging. NOTHING changed. Just the price..

The quality is worse. The workers aren’t paid worth a crap...Why the increase?

I’m getting ready to finish my home out. WOW.. I might have to rethink this a bit..

The price all most tripled in 12-18 months.. This kind of stuff is NOT cool at ALL.

Just my opinion of course. Any projects you’re doing get put on hold or STOPED?

YES I’m very frugal. Money never came easy, and it leaves the same way..

oldhvymec
To think I just wanted to build some speakers. Even the speakers went up,

I knew a lady who worked for the Rhodesian (now Zimbabwean) government, retired in 1980 and then moved to Ontario.  She was getting a pension which was enough for a car payment and a little spending money. In 1995 she told me that her pension which was more than sufficient to cover a car payment in 1980, could not even cover the cost of a single loaf of bread anymore. 

The joys of inflation



I'm just waiting for the booster, shot LOL

Keep in mind, it's not going to protect you from the new variant. Even worse, it could possibly hide the symptoms of COIVID but still render you infectious - meaning you could inadvertently pass it along to loved ones.

Just imagine, children unknowingly infecting their aged parents, or a pregnant mother not displaying symptoms, unknowingly passing it to her unborn child. 

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Well, if everyone knows that without Covid, things will return to a somewhat normal way of living, then we should be asking why all the hesitancy from those that are refusing to get it, and how they parallel the ones complaining the most about the economy.

Just read this morning (and you'll all be hearing it today) that the Delta variant is almost as contagious as chickenpox (R0 of 10-12). It has an R0 of 8-9 compared to an R0<2 for the initial strain. That makes it much more contagious than Smallpox (R0-3) and Polio (R0 of 4-6) folks.

Even those who are vaccinated get it and spread it as easily but don't suffer the consequences like the unvaccinated do.

The CDC was preparing a statement but some newspaper got ahold of and printed it. Makes a lot of sense to go out and get the vaccine but then, what would some have to complain about if they did? Lots of things would improve overnight but then someone you don't like would get the credit for it and that pisses you off? Now, that's a real death panel and not some made up stuff.

Right now New York has 970 people hospitalized from Delta and Florida has 7,763 and it's all policy driven for, reasons (can't say that word or people will flip out).

All the best,
Nonoise
A meager government pension from a defunct government?
The Zimbabwean government is not defunct. Google Zimbabwe and educate yourself.

Yes, it was meager and the lady wasn’t wealthy, but there is no need to be disparaging about it.


An amount set 41 years ago? Really?
1995 was only 15 years after 1980, and the concept of inflation is as relevant today ad it was than.

(Apologies, I didn’t mean to bombard you with geography and math at the same time. I suspect that’s what’s putting you off your game)

And what retiree should have a car payment?
Taking a wild guess; how about one that has purchased a car?


It takes about $3 today to buy what $1 would buy in 1980. You talk about the price of bread then versus now, its probably more like $5 today would buy what $1 then would have

Well, this will come as a huge shock to you, but Zimbabwe has their own currency.

Let me alleviate some of that there ignorance.

Different currencies have different inflation rates. Currencies with high inflation rates tend to drop in value v.s. currencies with lower inflation rates.

Zimbabwe has had double digit inflation rates for decades, often as high as 50% and even 24,411% in 2007 (no jokes - look it up). Inflation was so bad, that they issued a 100 trillion Zimbabwean dollar note.

Zimbabwe $100 trillion 2009 Obverse - Zimbabwean dollar - Wikipedia

The CA dollar has been at around 4% - 5% level.

Do the math. (yeah I know, that’s pushing things)

Additionally, your Covid example is complete rubbish

Indeed? Is that because the new variant COVID is not infectious?

Or the fact that people who have received so-called vaccines are now being asked to wear masks but only as a fashion accessory as they cannot possibly get ill or spread COVID?

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