Friday 20 June 2008

What about the price of bananas?

Here is one item that hasn't seen a significant increase in prices. The price of bananas from the Birmingham and New Spitalfieds wholesale market has remained remarkably stable since 2005. There was a small speculative surge earlier this year, but more recently, it petered out.

So if you see your supermarket hiking the price of a kilo of the bananas then you know that they are pushing up their margins. Going foward, I suspect we will see retailers using growing inflationary expectations as a cover for pushing up their profit rates. This is one of the unfortunate consequences of inflation.

So, is anyone paying more for their bananas recently? If so, you are being ripped off.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bananas? I am impressed, where did you get that chart from?

Mark Wadsworth said...

That would be even cooler if you had a 100-day moving average; daily turnover in bars along the x-axis and little candlesticks showing tops and bottoms.

Anonymous said...

Are they bog standard or fair trade?

Alice Cook said...

bog standard sold in Birmingham.

Electro-Kevin said...

You know your bananas but do you know your onions ? That is the question.

I think you do.

You get linked by E-K today.

BTW - the House Price Crash blog (linked right) having been predicting a crash for years now.

Anonymous said...

I hope Gordon Brown (Oliver Hardy) or Alistair Darling (Stan Luarel)doesn't see your graph or the doctored CPI will be replaced with the BPI... Banana Price Index.
No one will get any pay rises then !

Alice Cook said...

electro-kevin,

I will reciprocate the link as soon as I have time.

Alice

Alice Cook said...

Mark, no banana inflation, we better keep it quiet, or that is all we will be eating.

Actually, there was a half-hearted attempt at generating a banana bubble earlier this year (see chart). However, the British public weren't biting. One bubble too many, perhaps?

Alice

Anonymous said...

Surely the price of bananas will include costs such as transportation, storage, refrigeration (maybe?) and other logistically related costs. All these things are rising with energy prices.

Alice Cook said...

qg,

There are wholesale banana prices, recorded at a market in Birmingham by DEFRA. I am sure all your observations are valid, but for some reason, we can't see any inflation in these prices.

I am as shocked as you are!

Alice

Electro-Kevin said...

No need to reciprocate, Alice. Mine is a purile little blog with a greater readership than I deserve - I appreciate your saying so anyway.

Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Hi,
just came back from Tesco, bananas are 67p/kg lowered from 77p/kg! It's been at this level for some 3 weeks now. In fact last year autumn bananas were 85p/kg so in fact prices have gone down at least at the retail level. Or is it a case of bananas being a 'loss leader' in retail speak. Sainsbury's almost always exactly matches the prices. You see I do mind my banana (prices).
some more banana trivia -

http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2008/06/the_once_and_future_banana.cfm

Playdumb

Electro-Kevin said...

Doesn't the cost of transporting bananas factor into it ?

Anonymous said...

Oh what a lovely bunch of coconuts!

Anonymous said...

Does this chart include the costs and material type of their pyjamas?

shtove said...

Bananas blamed for 500% inflation in Alice's blog comments.