Thanksgiving 2023 is the Second Cheapest Ever (Relative to Earnings)

Continuing my tradition of Thanksgiving posts, Farm Bureau released today the latest data on the cost of a traditional Thanksgiving meal. There is welcome news for consumers, as the nominal price of the dinner is slightly lower than last year: $61.17 vs. $64.05 in 2022. The big factor in this decline was the fall in the price of turkeys, though eight of the 12 items in this meal are lower than 2022. As they note in the press release, this is still significantly higher than 2019: about 25% higher.

Regular readers will know what’s coming. Let’s compare those prices (and some historical prices) to earnings:

The Farm Bureau turkey dinner stands at about 5.5 percent of median weekly earnings from the third quarter of this year. That’s a touch higher than 2019, when it was 5.3 percent of weekly earnings. But notice that other than 2019, the figure for 2023 is the lowest ever! (Ignoring the weird years of the pandemic, when wage data is hard to interpret.) So we haven’t quite gotten back to 2019 levels, but we are at the same level as 2018. And lower than 2017. And all prior years too.

The last few Thanksgivings have been tough for Americans. This year, we can all be thankful for falling prices and rising wages.

5 thoughts on “Thanksgiving 2023 is the Second Cheapest Ever (Relative to Earnings)

  1. Al's avatar Al November 28, 2023 / 10:41 pm

    “falling prices”
    What the left won’t bald face lie about to cover for their team. Wow.

    Like

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