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Food prices keep rising, what can the sinkie do?

tomychua

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Article Source: http://goo.gl/FebCRq

What Can Singaporeans Do about Rising Food Prices?
Written by: AspirantSG

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Why The Price Hike?

Not many know that the price adjustments were actually due to the requests of partners and tenants of Foodfare’s food courts and coffee shops, which was finally allowed by Foodfare (after keeping prices the same for many years).

The price increases were not initiated by Foodfare themselves, which will continue to look into assisting the needy to reduce the cost of food through social programmes and special discounts.

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Are The Higher Prices Justified?

Not too long ago, netizens railed against the same NTUC Foodfare for imposing price caps on hawkers at the new Bukit Panjang Hawker Centre. Food influencers such as Leslie Tay, Daniel Goh and KF Seetoh have also been long-time advocates for the right to set higher prices to earn a living and preserve our food culture.

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Leslie Tay: First of all, we have to realise that we have a culinary prejudice against our food. Why are you so happy paying S$15 for a bowl of ramen, and you complain when the bowl of bak chor mee goes up by another S$0.50 to S$4.50?

Daniel Goh: A fellow drinks seller once told me that a few customers verbally abused him when they found out he raised prices of his coffee drinks by 10 cents.

“I’ve not raised prices for almost 10 years,” he decried. “They complain that they have to now pay $1 for a kopi (coffee), but these are the people who don’t even blink at paying $7 at Starbucks.”

Search your hearts, you know he’s right.

The trouble is, such prejudice reinforces the belief that the trade is not worth joining. Times may have changed, but mindsets sadly haven’t.

Damned if you do; damned if you don’t

If food businesses raise prices, consumers may avoid or even boycott them. Hawker prices are not immune to market forces either.

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KF Seetoh: He raised his fishball noodles to a market-familiar price of $3.50, up 50 cents from some months back. These are fishballs that are handmade at 5am each day. They go through hours of boiling, and electricity costs accompany such culinary traditions.

Overnight, more than half the regulars avoided young Douglas Ng and his Fishball Story stall at Golden Mile Food Centre. The thing is: he is not allowed much space to complain when the prices of raw ingredients, gas and transport go up. Such things directly affect his cost. The reality is that hawker food prices are set to rise as inevitably as basic salaries due to natural cost factors impressing on them

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But if food prices don’t increase, how can food sellers continue to run a viable business?

A Spring Singapore Study conducted in 2015 found that 4 in 10 F&B businesses don’t last beyond 5 years. Smaller F&B businesses that survived had to drop poor-performing or low profit-margin items.

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But does it make sense for drink operators at coffee shops and food courts to drop kopis and tehs in favour of lattés and fruit teas?

What can you do about rising food prices?

We know that eventually, food prices will increase, but we hate it when it affects our pockets as a consumer. Food and beverages account for a quarter of our household expenditure, so examining our spending habits is useful.

Some finance websites have a budget tracker, or you can create your own through excel to monitor your cash outflow. You may be surprised how much your cumulative expenses add up to.

You can also track if your major expenses come from the 20c price increase (which you can always order the kosong version to avoid paying that 20c more), or whether your impulse buys on online shopping apps/websites are the real culprits reducing your retirement funds.

Try not to miss the forest for the trees, and invest your efforts to piece together a bigger picture of your liabilities and opportunities to save.
 

Agoraphobic

Alfrescian
Loyal
Best thing to do - eat at home. Learn to prepare meals at home. It's healthier too - you control what is added to the food!

Cheers!
 

no_faith

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Nothing. 70% ordy agreed on price hike. No complaints. Their wishes granted. Hahaha:biggrin:
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I eat at home which is healthier. I really don't miss going out to eat because the quality of restaurant food in Spore is not that high or maybe the high cost makes me lose my appetite:biggrin:

Going to JB, Batam, LOS is much more enjoyable then eating in Spore. Not only is the price cheaper but the experience is more relaxing as I don't need to queue for a table. :smile:
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Food expensive, drink more 3-in-1 instant coffee. Three packets should be quite filling, and free flow from the company pantry. Learn from your City Harvest church ministers.
 

GoldenDragon

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Having more self-imposed fasting is one way. Can also visit Buddhist Lodge for healthy food. Once awhile tongpang RC makan when events are organised.
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
u know how u can make food cheap again?stop monopolising all the hawker and food court and kopitiam rental space and give us back street and roadside hawkers like thailand and malaysia.i guarantee food prices will drop by 80 percent within a year.not to mention tourism will go up too.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Sinkies should try to earn more money. That way, they can afford to dine better. Use the credits the government provided to all sinkies to go for upgrading courses.
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sinkies should try to earn more money. That way, they can afford to dine better. Use the credits the government provided to all sinkies to go for upgrading courses.

Excellent point John. Food price higher, become a hawker. Go with the flow. Very simple actually. :cool:
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
Excellent point John. Food price higher, become a hawker. Go with the flow. Very simple actually. :cool:

Don't be a fucking idiot. Food price higher, become a hawker? So when you became impotent, your wife became a whore? Moron. :rolleyes:
 

Papsmearer

Alfrescian (InfP) - Comp
Generous Asset
Food costs is going up for sure. The inflation numbers PAP give are really under reporting. I wonder why the hawkers never try to organize themselves better. I mean you have maybe 60 stalls or more in a larger hawker centre. there are some basic ingredients that every stall will buy. eg, rice, salt, sugar, soya sauce, vegetables, meat (chicken, pork, Beef), tofu, etc. But yet I have never heard of any hawker organizing a co-operative among themselves in the same hawker centre. Certainly there must be economies of scale if they bulk in large quantities together. Maybe 1 stall in the hawker centre use 10 bags of rice a week, but all the stalls together might use 500 bags a week. Surely if they do central ordering, they should get economies of scale by simple bulk purchasing. They can tender bids for rice supply and I am sure that way, they lower their costs. For vegetables and meat, they can cut the middle man out directly and go to Malaysia to the farms and arrange supplies directly from there. Every day, 1 lorry delivers all their vegetables from malaysia. There must be savings there if they cut out the wholesaler and buy in Ringgit. Maybe I am too simplistic, but were any initiatives like that explored? What about delivery service. If Pizzas can be delivered, why not certain foods like chicken rice. char kway teow, etc. All HDB blocks within a 500m radius should have online access to a website for the hawker centre with the menu and pricing for each individual stall. Customer places the order online, delivery man goes around to the relevant stalls, place the orders, then pick them up for delivery to a nearby block. In North america, its very common to have chinese food delivered. There are a lot of possibilities I think that are not explored to increase sales and lower food costs. And don't say that these hawkers are not so educated to do that. The second generation working for them is certainly computer and tech literate, as well there are younger giving up a prior career to be a hawker.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Excellent point John. Food price higher, become a hawker. Go with the flow. Very simple actually. :cool:

Food price gets higher, you should set up an import-export or some food commodities trading company. Hawkers are price-takers, not price-setters. Besides, I think most sinkies aren't cut out for that sort of back-breaking work as hawkers.
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
Food price gets higher, you should set up an import-export or some food commodities trading company. Hawkers are price-takers, not price-setters. Besides, I think most sinkies aren't cut out for that sort of back-breaking work as hawkers.

This suggestion makes more sense than that fucking idiot mojito's suggestion. Moron! :rolleyes:
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Food price gets higher, you should set up an import-export or some food commodities trading company. Hawkers are price-takers, not price-setters. Besides, I think most sinkies aren't cut out for that sort of back-breaking work as hawkers.

All sinkies should be hawkers, so they can learn the value of hard work! I have to disagree with you, while hawkers cannot price much higher than peers, it is the customers who are ultimately the price takers. For the regular pleb, you got an hour or two for lunch, there are only so many places you can go to.
 
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