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But supermarkets haven't seen a cut in trade.You are joking of course (aren't you?) On that principal you will be happy to pay 300% for all your shopping.
But supermarkets haven't seen a cut in trade.You are joking of course (aren't you?) On that principal you will be happy to pay 300% for all your shopping.
Last time I had a pint Gunness at Le Tarmac (I kid you not) in Vannes it was something over 7 euros. I didn't go back for a second. Next day I got a six pack of the little Guinness bottles at 5% abv. 4,99€ for three times the volume. If I want to sit on the crowded terrace of Le Tarmac, I'll stick to coffee. Can't stand people taking the ****, it spoils the taste of the beer.Saying that the price of a pint of Guinness down south will set you back 5 euro in some city's
Well they have in Wales, and if you forget supermarkets, then everything else then, my point being just because they have had a cut in trade so have many other businesses, doesn't mean I am happy to pay 3 x the price for a plumber or homebrew supplies or a camera.But supermarkets haven't seen a cut in trade.
I quite agree. Prices should go down as competition sharpens, but they'll go up and having gone up, will stay up. Do we owe these people a living?Well they have in Wales, and if you forget supermarkets, then everything else then, my point being just because they have had a cut in trade so have many other businesses, doesn't mean I am happy to pay 3 x the price for a plumber or homebrew supplies or a camera.
Have they? I don't know about independent supermarkets but I don't think any of the national companies release specific Welsh turnover figures.Well they have in Wales, and if you forget supermarkets, then everything else then, my point being just because they have had a cut in trade so have many other businesses, doesn't mean I am happy to pay 3 x the price for a plumber or homebrew supplies or a camera.
Currently they are only allowed to sell essential items, so yesHave they? I don't know about independent supermarkets but I don't think any of the national companies release specific Welsh turnover figures.
Perhaps all the panic buying would settle out the two week drop in takingsCurrently they are only allowed to sell essential items, so yes
I certainly can't justify paying for these hipster type beers, as I don't have a frilly moustache. Thought I'd have been safe price-wise with the Kolsch.Hipster beers equals hipster prices, I'm not a hipster and just about accept paying £3.50 in my local.
Indeed, I think we do not. Further, I don't like the suggestion from the barman that I should just accept that I should pay such a price, just because someone decided to open a microbrewery and make small batches. Feels like the cost of someone's dream is being passed on to the consumer in this case.Do we owe these people a living?
We are catching up with some European countries we were paying 8 or 9 euros for half a litre in France last year. TBH though it was bloody strong 2 was enough.I was in my local last week and, as I like to support local breweries, I was tempted by a Kolsch that is brewed 2.6 miles away. On seeing the price, I assumed there was a typo as it was down as £7.60 for a pint. When I queried, I was told it's because they are a small brewery (double barrelled). Is that really a thing? I understand stupidly over-hopped doule-whatever kind of beers being pricier, but from what I see, there's nothing too expensive going into a kolsch. Indeed, I had a reasonably priced(£4.something) kolsch in another local pub not 2 weeks ago. Needless to say I chose something else.
I appreciate I am in the South, and I recall when I moved down here in 2006 I was shocked when I had to pay £3 for a pint. Now anything over £5 makes me wince.
You need to understand that in France, at least, you'll be fleeced to the very limits of what the market will bear. There's something a bit funny about how the French react to this: it's almost as if the price is proportional to the pleasure or the perceived worth. For example, I've found exactly the same product in three different parts of a supermarket with three different bar codes depending whether it's in gardening, baking, or cleaning and at a price range of 2.5 the cost of the cheapest.We are catching up with some European countries we were paying 8 or 9 euros for half a litre in France last year. TBH though it was bloody strong 2 was enough.
Shame. I'm not a Marxist either. Doesn't mean everything he said was bollixist! His (and Engels') analysis was fair enough, just the conclusions were (to my mind) a bit iffy. Nothing wrong with being Left Wing, though. Doesn't mean you're a Marxist. But at the end of the day: "Girls in short skirts will do it "BTW I am NOT a left wing Marxist.
14p for a pint of Bass was the first pint I bought when I was 16As someone who can remember 13p a pint on his 18th birthday
I would refuse to pay a fiver++++ no-matter what the beer.
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