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coffee shops and hawkers refuse to lower prices after CNY

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Feb 8, 2011
Price hikes at some stalls stay after CNY
Owners cite rising costs as main reason; experts expect more increases
By Jessica Lim

ST_IMAGES_LJHAWKER08.jpg

At the Old Airport Road hawker centre, Western food stall International Cuisine is charging up to $1 more for its main course items. A plate of battered prawns, for instance, now costs $7, up from $6. At a neighbouring stall, popiah costs 10 cents more a roll. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM

THE lucrative Chinese New Year period may be over for hawker stalls here, but some are sticking to the price hikes they introduced during the festive season.

The stalls, selling everything from steamed fish head and popiah to Western fare and drinks, are a minority. But experts say their actions could spark a new round of price increases.

A Straits Times check of 206 stalls at 14 food centres yesterday found that 15 have raised their prices permanently.

At the Old Airport Road hawker centre, main courses at Western food stall International Cuisine now cost up to $1 more. A plate of battered prawns, for instance, now costs $7, up from $6.

Its owner Gene Lee, 50, who raised prices on Thursday, said: 'The cost of ingredients has gone up. Even prices of takeaway containers have increased.'

A neighbouring stall now sells popiah at $1.30 per roll, up from $1.20 two days ago. This price will stay as long as the cost of turnips remains high, said the stall's 52-year-old owner, who wants to be known only as Madam Chen.

Over at Ting & Ting Food Court, a small coffee shop in Jurong West, a zi char stall raised the prices of its rice and noodle dishes two days ago. A plate of fried rice now costs $3.50, up from $3.

At the Chinatown Complex hawker centre, Huan Xi Canton Cuisine increased the price of its fish head dishes from $13 to $15 on Friday.

Even owners of non-Chinese food stalls are seizing the opportunity to raise prices permanently.

The Green Leaf, a nasi lemak stall at Maxwell Road hawker centre, increased the price of its lontong from $2.50 to $2.70 yesterday. Next door, SMH Hot & Cold Drinks increased the prices of its hot drinks by 10 cents on Feb 3.

'I've been holding prices for so long and decided to increase during Chinese New Year,' said its manager Mohamad Deen, 33. 'Other stalls increase prices too, so customers are more accepting, and it's not so shocking and sudden.'

Typically, eateries charge a premium on the first two days of Chinese New Year. The hike, which sometimes lasts until the fourth day, is due to higher wages paid during the public holiday.

Hawkers, long squeezed by the rising cost of ingredients, are biting the bullet and finally increasing prices this Chinese New Year, said experts, who expect to see more price increases on the horizon.

'Stall owners leverage on the mentality of consumers during Chinese New Year when they are more willing to pay and are expecting prices to be higher anyway,' said Mr Andrew Lee, marketing and retail lecturer at Singapore Polytechnic's business school.

'Hawker centres are tight-knit communities and if one stall sells something cheaper than the others, there is tension. Once a few start to increase prices permanently, more will feel they can do it too.'

Global food prices - for a wide range of items from sugar and chillies to soya beans and wheat - are soaring, as bad weather hit crop supplies and demand from emerging economies grows.

Madam Oh Guat Keng, 47, who owns Yi Fa Kway Chap at the Old Airport Road hawker centre, said she now pays $7.40 for a kilogram of noodles, up from $6.60 before Chinese New Year.

Customers like Madam Wong Kway Yok, 65, who paid 10 cents more for popiah at the Old Airport Road hawker centre yesterday, are philosophical. 'There is no choice, everything now costs more,' she said in Mandarin.

Others don't look at it that way.

Housewife Chua Chew Hong, 48, said it was normal for prices to rise during Chinese New Year. 'But to maintain prices after that is not very fair,' she said.

[email protected]

Additional reporting by Goh Kai Shi and Neo Wen Tong
'Hawker centres are tight-knit communities and if one stall sells something cheaper than the others, there is tension. Once a few start to increase prices permanently, more will feel they can do it too.'

Singapore Polytechnic marketing and retail lecturer Andrew Lee
 
Feb 8, 2011
Some coffee shops won't lower prices
By Jamie Ee Wen Wei

MOST coffee shops raised the price of hot drinks by 10 to 20 cents over Chinese New Year, but some are making the increase permanent.

While prices usually come down after the festivities, some coffee shops have decided not to lower them, citing increases in the cost of coffee powder, sugar and other overhead expenses.

Two weeks ago, The Straits Times reported that Starbucks and the S-11 chain of coffee shops had become the latest large chains to raise the price of their coffee.

At the time, the two main coffee shop groups, the Foochow Coffee Restaurant and Bar Merchants Association and the Kheng Keow Coffee Merchants Restaurant and Bar Owners Association, said most of their members were holding prices steady.

However, over the Chinese New Year period, about 40 per cent of the members of the Kheng Keow Coffee Merchants Restaurant and Bar Owners Association raised coffee and tea prices by 10 to 20 cents - and have kept them there since.

'For the time being, they won't lower prices. But if prices of coffee powder and sugar go down, they will adjust the prices accordingly,' said the association's chairman, Mr Thomas Foo, in Mandarin.

Mr Hong Poh Hin, chairman of the Foochow Coffee Restaurant and Bar Merchants Association, said most of its members have lowered their drinks prices back to pre-Chinese New Year levels.

Meanwhile, foodcourt chain Kopitiam will raise the price of its hot drinks by 10 cents at close to half of its outlets - mainly coffee shops and food courts in the heartland and industrial estates - from next month.

Asked how customers will take to the new pricing, Mr Foo said: 'What's most important is for coffee shops to state their prices clearly, to avoid any disputes or misunderstandings. Customers can then decide if they want to patronise the shop or not.'
 
wahlaneh...
chinese say: 顺水推舟!mah!
follow water push boat.
when flood water subsided the boat remained on mountain didnt come down leh.:D
 
wahlaneh...
chinese say: 顺水推舟!mah!
follow water push boat.
when flood water subsided the boat remained on mountain didnt come down leh.:D

In SINgapore, they follow the 'thunder god'...it rains 'water' ( money ), so follow & collect the 'water'.

More 'rains' coming this Feb 18, 2011, and more 'floodings' ( price increases), this will be a once in 150 years, price increases.:D
 
In SINgapore, they follow the 'thunder god'...it rains 'water' ( money ), so follow & collect the 'water'.

More 'rains' coming this Feb 18, 2011, and more 'floodings' ( price increases), this will be a once in 150 years, price increases.:D

wahlaneh...
like that how to avoid high cost of living in sg? sigh~:(
 
Consumers have the rights to choose so if you think that this shop is over charging... Just go next door one! Unless they start to form a cartel...
 
Consumers have the rights to choose so if you think that this shop is over charging... Just go next door one! Unless they start to form a cartel...

90% of the coffeeshops are under chain retailers, what do you think about the price hike they can collaborate ???
 
Singaporeans are paying a lot for medium-quality or sometimes poor-quality food.

At least, the Japanese are paying a lot for high-quality food.
 
wahlaneh...
like that how to avoid high cost of living in sg? sigh~:(

Go to your friendly neighbourhood store in JB. :)

Living in Woodlands used to be very ulu but with with the inflation in Spore it's now advantageous to live in Woodlands.
 
Singaporeans are paying a lot for medium-quality or sometimes poor-quality food.

At least, the Japanese are paying a lot for high-quality food.

The Japs pay too much for high-quality food and they often have to force themselves into being content thinking they are full when they are clearly not.
 
there is only inflation... no such things as reduction
 
Consumers have the rights to choose so if you think that this shop is over charging... Just go next door one! Unless they start to form a cartel...

How to choose, I give you an example, where I live, the nearest three coffee shops had become part of a chain of coffeshops, they operate like a mini food court. Two are opened 24 hours, and don't expect to eat cheap, never mind about cheap, quality had gone out of the window.

A bit further, one can find three food courts, one by S11 & the other two by Kopi Tiam. One can find only two, old fashion heartland coffee shops, food prices reasonable, slightly cheaper than the rest & food taste better, individual owned cooked food stalls. One semi-foodcourt, still better than those converted ones or better than the food court chains.

Some major redevelopment is afloat, soon the traditional heartland coffee shops that offer affordable, tasty food & drinks will soon be gone.

How to choose???

Unless SINgaporeans now how to choose at the ballot boxes, soon , very soon eating out will be a thing of the past.

Choose NOW!:p
 
ya, i eat at the food court but come home to drink my tea or coffee. like that can save $1 and then, 12 days later, i can go harry's for my pint of heineken.:eek::D

Why don't you eat at home?:rolleyes:
 
Why don't you eat at home?:rolleyes:

I do, I cooked at home ...but once in a while, one have to venture out to see the world out there...

When cooking at home, one becomes, an economist, an accountant, a cost accountant & a cook, not to mention, a cleaner also. But, I try my best to cook at home....but due to work, no choice but to eat out.:p
 
ya, i eat at the food court but come home to drink my tea or coffee. like that can save $1 and then, 12 days later, i can go harry's for my pint of heineken.:eek::D

Isn't drinking a pint of Heinekan cheaper at the coffee shops with the beer aunties, or the China mei mei's??:rolleyes:
 
ya, it's even cheaper if you buy from cheers store, 2 X 500ml can of tiger for $7.25 for the whole of last december.:rolleyes::D

Isn't drinking a pint of Heinekan cheaper at the coffee shops with the beer aunties, or the China mei mei's??:rolleyes:
 
every cny, prices sure increase. no justification.
employing cheap labour yet prices still increase.

u cant see prices drop in sg, dont u?
 
Feb 8, 2011
'For the time being, they won't lower prices. But if prices of coffee powder and sugar go down, they will adjust the prices accordingly,' said the association's chairman, Mr Thomas Foo, in Mandarin.

I recall coffee price went up and stayed up, never see any price reduction before even when commodity price drops.
 
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