More than it was last year, but less than next year. And it depends on if you're making it yourself or get one at a deli. I also notice that there are peanut butter shortages at my local Walmart. All they have is that "natural" stuff you have to stir, which is fine, because I like that better than other types anyway.
Well, you're setting up a series of chained hypotheticals. Regardless, in an apocalypse, all bets are out the window. I won't attempt to speculate.
Still, as per my other comment on this thread, the depopulation is gradual; 1.2 instead of 1.5 children due to infertility, and the death rate goes from say, 1,000 per 100,000 to 1,200 in 100,000. Given that, I don't think we will have a situation where people will trade a house for a sandwich.
More than it was last year, but less than next year. And it depends on if you're making it yourself or get one at a deli. I also notice that there are peanut butter shortages at my local Walmart. All they have is that "natural" stuff you have to stir, which is fine, because I like that better than other types anyway.
Why do you ask?
In the depopulated apocalypse people are trading houses for a sandwich.
OP said that depopulation is deflationary.
I argue that it is inflationary.
If you have to trade a house for a sandwich --- how much fiat money would that be?
Well, you're setting up a series of chained hypotheticals. Regardless, in an apocalypse, all bets are out the window. I won't attempt to speculate.
Still, as per my other comment on this thread, the depopulation is gradual; 1.2 instead of 1.5 children due to infertility, and the death rate goes from say, 1,000 per 100,000 to 1,200 in 100,000. Given that, I don't think we will have a situation where people will trade a house for a sandwich.