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<h1 class="post__title"><a title="Groceries at Whole Foods might cost your whole paycheck again" href="https://www.fastcompany.com/40477496/groceries-at-whole-foods-might-cost-your-whole-paycheck-again">Groceries at Whole Foods might cost your whole paycheck again</a></h1>
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<div class="post__featured-caption">[Photo: <a href="https://unsplash.com/@carolineattwood" rel="nofollow">Caroline Attwood</a>]</div>
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<p>Amazon may have drummed up some goodwill by lowering prices right after it acquired Whole Foods, but<strong> it turns out that extra pocket change might be fleeting. </strong></p>
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<p>Market research firm Gordon Haskett has been tracking the prices on 110 items at a Whole Foods in New Jersey since August 28, when Amazon officially bought the company. According to <em><a class="body-el-link standard-body-el-link" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/business/wp/2017/10/02/amazon-promised-to-make-whole-foods-cheaper-lets-see-how-thats-going/?utm_term=.2b5a56934ed7" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Washington Post </a></em>(which is also owned by Amazon), the firm found that while on average prices have gone down 1.2%, <strong> certain items are creeping back up in price</strong>. For example, frozen foods rose 7% in price from August 28 to September 26. But it’s not just the freezer aisle. The firm found that the costs of snacks rose by 5.3% and dairy and yogurt rose by 2%. Overall, 77 of the 110 items they looked at stayed the same in price, while 16 items increased and 17 decreased.</p>
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<p class="body-el-text standard-body-el-text"><strong>Luckily, the price increases aren’t across the board (yet!)</strong>.  It looks like Whole Foods is keeping staple items like bread and produce discounted (likely to keep customers coming back every week). And millennials needn’t worry: you can still  get your LaCroix fix on the cheap: beverages prices are down about 2.8 %.<a class="post__initials" href="https://www.fastcompany.com/user/melissa-locker">ML</a></p>
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