…to a reasonable degree, at least.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    My default is to buy the grocery store’s house brand unless I can tell the difference.

    A 26 ounce can of Morton’s iodized salt at my local grocery store costs $2.19. The Food Lion brand costs $0.79. Explain to me why I would pay more than twice the price for name brand salt?

    Especially in goods where I know the complete chemical formula of the product like salt and sugar, until I encounter a serious problem with quality or unethical sourcing I’m not going to pay for the brand name.

    • Lianodel@ttrpg.network
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      3 months ago

      This is especially true with generic medicines.

      The cheapest I can get Claritin in my nearest supermarket is 50¢—$1.12/pill.

      The store brand can be as low as 7¢—37¢/pill.)

      The CostCo version is 2 or 3¢/pill.

      All of them are the same. 10mg of loratadine, highly regulated by the FDA.

      They can differ with inactive ingredients, so maybe you’d like a syrup or something from a name brand. But it legally has to be the same active ingredients, in the same amounts, in the same forms.