From USA Today:
“'Like we're
going into quarantine': Americans plan to stockpile food this fall over fears
of COVID-19 surge, election unrest”
Leslyn Hall
says she and her husband plan to stock up on groceries later this month. At the
back of her mind are concerns about disruptions in supplies if there’s another
COVID-19 surge, as well as potential unrest surrounding the Nov. 3 presidential
election. “We talked about doing a big shop like we’re going into quarantine,”
says Hall, 53, of Burlington, Vermont. On the list: enough basics such as milk,
beans and rice to last for two to three weeks. Hall, a consultant, points out
that her local grocery stores struggle to keep their shelves fully stocked and
have shortages of products like cleaning supplies, even though her state has
one of the lowest COVID-19 rates in the U.S. “Arguably speaking, we have
control of things in Vermont, but you still go into the grocery store and there
are shelves that are sparse,” she says. More than half of Americans in a recent
poll say they already have or plan to stockpile food and other essentials.
Hall isn’t
alone in her plans to stock up her pantry this fall. Slightly more than half of
Americans in a recent poll from Sports and Leisure Research Group say they
already have or plan to stockpile food and other essentials. The chief reason:
fears of a resurgent pandemic, which could lead to disruptions such as new
restrictions on businesses. On Oct. 2, the number of COVID-19 cases in the USA
was its highest in almost two months. “We still see a majority of Americans are
concerned that we will see more spikes in COVID, and it's beginning to rear its
head in a number of states,” says Jon Last, president of the Sports and Leisure
Research Group. “At the same time, there is COVID fatigue.”
He points to
the survey’s findings that while roughly 52% plan to stockpile this fall, about
48% said they aren’t. Of those who are stockpiling, the majority are concerned
about an increase in infection rates, but a smaller share of people say they
are worried about unrest surrounding the election next month. Shoppers are
unlikely to see the types of shortages experienced in March and April when
states enacted stay-at-home orders and grocery shelves were emptied of
essentials like toilet paper and flour. Grocery chains are stocking up on
supplies ahead of the winter months to ensure they can meet demand as COVID-19
cases increase, as well as the holidays, according to The Wall Street Journal. More
than half of Americans in a recent survey say they plan to stock up on
groceries amid concerns about another COVID-19 surge and possible political
unrest. Already, there’s some evidence that grocery sales are rising, according
to data from industry sources. The typical bill for a trip to the grocery store
rose to $72 for the week ended October 6, or 11% higher from the week before,
according to data company Envestnet Yodlee. “That's the highest we've seen
since the first week of June and the second-highest since we started tracking
this in January,” said Bill Parsons, group president of data and analytics at
Evestnet. Grocery spending peaked in April, he notes.
Searches
rise for hard-to-find goods Consumers are increasingly turning to online
grocery delivery to fill their pantries, with 17.2% of grocery sales now spent
online, an almost 2-percentage-point increase from the start of September,
Parsons added. Meanwhile, Instacart says searches for hard-to-find staples
during the pandemic are on the upswing again, with a 14% increase in “toilet
paper” searches in the past four weeks. Grocery spending remains elevated partly
because of the dynamics of the pandemic, according to Anne-Marie Roerink,
principal and founder of 210 Analytics, which tracks grocery sales. Millions of
adults and children continue to work or learn from home, which creates more
demand for home-prepped meals. “All of us now have beans in the pantry
and some meals ready to make,” she says. “We have learned to buy online and
replenish all the time rather than ‘I'm out of everything but condiments.’”
^ For the past
11 years I have had to stock-up my supplies here twice a year (in the Fall and
in the Spring.) That is because I live on a mountain and never know if I will
be able to leave - even to drive down to
my mailbox – due to ice, snow, the dirt road or one-lane bridge being washed
away, a downed tree blocking the road, etc. So I have stocked-up this Fall for
that reason. It was more difficult this year because of all the Covid-19
hoarding and continued shortages (both on online websites and in-person
shopping.) I can understand people stocking-up for a second wave this Winter,
but not for an potential Election chaos – unless you live in Washington DC. ^
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