Tag Archives: Economy

How to save on groceries as CPI ‘food at home’ prices soar | CNBC

Published Fri, Oct 14 202212:05 PM EDT, Updated Fri, Oct 14 20221:24 PM EDT

thumbnailBy Annie Nova@AnnieReporter

A woman shops for chicken at a supermarket in Santa Monica, California, on September 13, 2022.
Apu Gomes | AFP | Getty Images

Despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to get the cost of living under control, prices just keep climbing — and the uptick is especially brutal at the supermarket.

The cost of food overall climbed 11.2% in September from the year before, according to the latest consumer price index data released Thursday. Prices of “food at home,” aka groceries, soared 13% from the same time in 2021.

Many of the hardest-hit items are ones most families can’t do without: Eggs are up 30.5% from a year ago, while poultry is up 17.2% and milk 15.2%.

Still, there are a number of strategies you can use to reduce your food costs, experts say. Here are some of them.

Editor’s Note: Read more, see link below for original item…

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/14/how-to-save-on-groceries-as-cpi-food-at-home-prices-soar.html

Looking Where to Work Remotely? Libraries Could Be Your New Haven | Insider

By Angie Schmitt, Jun 13, 2022, 4:04 AM

Remote workers are missing office life, and local libraries are perfectly poised to offer a solution.
Marianne Ayala/Insider

I am a work-from-home veteran. Over the past 12 years of using my house as my base of operations, there are a few things I’ve learned that are really helpful.

Among the most important is a coffee shop I can walk to — sometimes you just need a snack and contact with human beings. These little out-of-home amenities are crucial to surviving as an out-of-office worker.

Lately though, I’ve noticed that my neighborhood is not set up to accommodate a massive increase in remote workers. For example, there is no smaller printing shop within walking distance — I have to make the three-mile trip to the print shop at a nearby Office Max. This is just one example of a growing problem: As the epicenter of white-collar work shifts away from the downtown office, cities need to catch up to the new class of remote workers who are now camped out in suburban neighborhoods.

And in my opinion, it’s the prime opportunity to elevate the humble neighborhood branch library.

Editor’s Note: Read more, see link below for original item…

Source: Looking Where to Work Remotely? Libraries Could Be Your New Haven

Amdocs: The great resignation: Boomers and Gen X stay put, while millennials and Gen Z walk away | VentureBeat

By VB Staff, September 19, 2021 12:15 PM

Above: There is a generational divide among people who leave their jobs.

19% of surveyed workers left or considered leaving a job in the last year.

However, there is a generational divide; 27% of millennials and 31% Gen Z have stated this, compared to just 13% of boomers, according to new research from Amdocs.

Tech workers are even more likely to flee, with 33% having left or considered leaving over the past year. More than 35% had colleagues leave, which negatively affected their daily workloads.

Source: Amdocs: The great resignation: Boomers and Gen X stay put, while millennials and Gen Z walk away | VentureBeat

Baby boomers retiring will affect the economy – here’s how | MSN money

By Alan Jones, 6 days ago

1 of 21 slides

Baby boomers retiring will affect the economy – here’s how North America went through a period known as the ‘baby boom’ after World War II, in which birth rates shot up dramatically for about two decades.

The first members of this generation reached retirement age in 2011, and the continued departure of baby boomers from the labour force is impacting the economy in interesting new ways.

Editor’s Note: See the link below to see the slideshow story…

Source: Baby boomers retiring will affect the economy – here’s how

Local Government Salaries Are Ticking Up — Slowly | Voice of San Diego

“Thousands of federal and state government workers reporting for duty in San Diego are making more than they did during the Great Recession.

Most local government workers can’t say the same, especially when you factor in a rising cost of living.

The average wage for San Diego County and the patchwork of local municipalities and agencies in the county makes about 3 percent less per week than she did in early 2009 when you include inflation.”

via Local Government Salaries Are Ticking Up — Slowly | Voice of San Diego.

The Great Wage Slowdown of the 21st Century – NYTimes.com

The Great Wage Slowdown of the 21st Century

OCT. 7, 2014

“American workers have been receiving meager pay increases for so long now that it’s reasonable to talk in sweeping terms about the trend. It is the great wage slowdown of the 21st century.”

via The Great Wage Slowdown of the 21st Century – NYTimes.com.