This. Value stocks, commodities, energy, precious metals (including brass and lead) are all good investments during stagflation.
Also, pre-buy shit you’ll need. You’re [presumably] going to be wiping your ass, showering, doing laundry and brushing your teeth for the next five years, so it doesn’t hurt to buy it all at once, now, while the price is a known thing. Ditto for shelf-stable food... if you eat a lot of something that keeps well, buy several years worth.
My Uncle and I bought some copper early in this thing and it has nearly double in value. I am a fan of the presently suppressed silver prices but always keep on the look out for other undervalued commodities as well.
I’m probably at about 9 months for staples without rationing (I have a lot of proteins like canned meats, beans, etc) and even more for dry goods with indefinite shelf lives. I’m probably not going to need much as far as toiletries for the next 5 years either.
The thing is, I’m not really anticipating a zombie apocalypse, but I am expecting prices to rise faster than income for a couple of years, and getting stuff now means that the actual costs relative to inflated prices are much lower than I actually paid. Stagflation is a really weird and rare condition for a market, since it really needs stupidity on a truly historical scale.
It’s worth doing some reading on the 70s stagflation in the US and the similar period in the UK in (I think) the 20s.
Fats and proteins are where it's at, and bonus points are that you will generate carbs from excess protein (which is why on keto you tend to watch your macros, because too much protein will be synthesized to glucose)
You don't have to avoid carbs necessarily, but for satiety it's fats and proteins. You feel full faster and digest more slowly.
Calories are calories, but you need fats and proteins to keep your body going. Especially in cold climates, fats are fundamentally necessary (your body generates internal heat to break them down — when I used to backpack in the mountains in winter my food was 50% fats and 50% carbs, with the fats consumed right before bed with hot water - it was the difference between sleeping comfortably or freezing to death).
Thankfully carbs are really cheap and easy - a 50lb bag or rice is like, $25 at a warehouse club, and you can get pasta for about $0.75/lb there too. If just starting out I’d get a 50lb bag of rice, 25-50lbs of pasta and then focus on a variety of canned or frozen meats, beans (canned and dry for ease of use vs when you have time to soak the day before). Also things like chunky soup (concentrate on the highest calorie non-cream soups), chef boyardi, chili, retried beans, baked beans, etc are effective ways of getting a bunch of fats and proteins. Also protein powder, shelf-stable milk and drink mixes, spices, oils, etc.
I’d caution you to prioritize things you eat regularly now or could imagine eating frequently, since you need to cycle through them to have it be of any value, just restock as it is available.
A handy trick is just buy 2 or 3 more than you need when you shop, and pick up a couple of replacements when you think of something running low and it adds up pretty quickly. Also helps make sure you’re only buying stuff you actually will use.
This. Value stocks, commodities, energy, precious metals (including brass and lead) are all good investments during stagflation.
Also, pre-buy shit you’ll need. You’re [presumably] going to be wiping your ass, showering, doing laundry and brushing your teeth for the next five years, so it doesn’t hurt to buy it all at once, now, while the price is a known thing. Ditto for shelf-stable food... if you eat a lot of something that keeps well, buy several years worth.
It’s going to be rocky for awhile.
My Uncle and I bought some copper early in this thing and it has nearly double in value. I am a fan of the presently suppressed silver prices but always keep on the look out for other undervalued commodities as well.
For how long do we need to b stocked up for
I’m probably at about 9 months for staples without rationing (I have a lot of proteins like canned meats, beans, etc) and even more for dry goods with indefinite shelf lives. I’m probably not going to need much as far as toiletries for the next 5 years either.
The thing is, I’m not really anticipating a zombie apocalypse, but I am expecting prices to rise faster than income for a couple of years, and getting stuff now means that the actual costs relative to inflated prices are much lower than I actually paid. Stagflation is a really weird and rare condition for a market, since it really needs stupidity on a truly historical scale.
It’s worth doing some reading on the 70s stagflation in the US and the similar period in the UK in (I think) the 20s.
Is stocking up on carbs the most important? I figure since they fill you up more they are handy in fighting off hunger.
Carbs aren't good.
Carbs make you hungrier.
Fats and proteins are where it's at, and bonus points are that you will generate carbs from excess protein (which is why on keto you tend to watch your macros, because too much protein will be synthesized to glucose)
You don't have to avoid carbs necessarily, but for satiety it's fats and proteins. You feel full faster and digest more slowly.
Calories are calories, but you need fats and proteins to keep your body going. Especially in cold climates, fats are fundamentally necessary (your body generates internal heat to break them down — when I used to backpack in the mountains in winter my food was 50% fats and 50% carbs, with the fats consumed right before bed with hot water - it was the difference between sleeping comfortably or freezing to death).
Thankfully carbs are really cheap and easy - a 50lb bag or rice is like, $25 at a warehouse club, and you can get pasta for about $0.75/lb there too. If just starting out I’d get a 50lb bag of rice, 25-50lbs of pasta and then focus on a variety of canned or frozen meats, beans (canned and dry for ease of use vs when you have time to soak the day before). Also things like chunky soup (concentrate on the highest calorie non-cream soups), chef boyardi, chili, retried beans, baked beans, etc are effective ways of getting a bunch of fats and proteins. Also protein powder, shelf-stable milk and drink mixes, spices, oils, etc.
I’d caution you to prioritize things you eat regularly now or could imagine eating frequently, since you need to cycle through them to have it be of any value, just restock as it is available.
A handy trick is just buy 2 or 3 more than you need when you shop, and pick up a couple of replacements when you think of something running low and it adds up pretty quickly. Also helps make sure you’re only buying stuff you actually will use.