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17 Things People Think These Cheap Items Will Be Expensive in the Future

Even though we know the world and the people in it are constantly changing, it still kind of surprises us when it does. We go about our business, figuring something (like gas, when you’re a teenager) will be the same prices for the rest of our lives.

The truth is, our economy is always in flux, and supply and demand can also turn on a dime.

Here are 17 things that are cheap now, but that people think will be much more expensive in the future.

17. Better options are on the horizon.

They’ve already started to go up a huge amount, but used cars.

I was looking at ‘99 corvettes. You could get them with 20-30k miles for $15,000 a year ago, now they’re $25,000 with 30-40k miles

16. Fish is definitely becoming scarce.

Cork, vanilla and many fish. The sources for them are not being properly maintained and are shrinking.

Vanilla has already more than doubled in price since 2015. There was a hurricane or something that wiped out most of the crop in Madagascar, which is where the vast majority of vanilla comes from.

About a decade ago I bought a 16oz bottle of fancypants vanilla bean “crush” (aka vanilla paste, basically a syrup form of vanilla extract) for a little over $20. Nowadays that same amount would run you at least $60.

Alcohol-based extract is generally cheaper than paste, but still way more expensive than it was as little as 6 years ago.

15. Only for the rich.

Real estate. It’s not that it’s cheap now — but in future decades I bet it’s going to be much more expensive relative to median income.

Land ownership has recently sort of crystallized where I live. Only the very rich can earn enough money to buy land. Everyone else inherits a family home or doesn’t.

If you want to work hard and buy a home? You can’t, but maybe your children or grandchildren will be able to if you have an OK job and save aggressively. I remember working it out as something like 80 person-years of savings at an upper-middle class job, if you have no kids,.

14. Less stuff isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

“Owning” devices.

Companies are lobbying hard to fight right to repair legislation that would make it so you can’t actually fix your own devices or have a repair shop do it for you. It’s already pretty bad with companies like Apple, Tesla, and John Deere.

They design stellar products but if anything goes wrong with them you’re almost always going to be told to buy a new one (apple) or to ship your heavy ass piece of machinery both ways for days to weeks to have it repaired when you should otherwise be able to do it yourself.

Farmers are moving back to ancient tractors since they can fix them themselves and get parts for a reasonable price, or they’re using bootleg Polish JD software to bypass the DRM in their tractors so they can actually fix these things in a timely matter. Sometimes having a $100 sensor break in your tractor can cost you upwards of $5000 with shipping, rigging, and labour. Not to mention a potentially lost harvest if it takes too long to fix.

13. Or they weren’t paying attention.

anything that comes from nature because the rate at how we harvest resources is faster than their recovery rate, they’re definitely gonna be scarcer.

Corporations probably never watched The Lorax huh.

12. I will miss banana cream pie.

Bananas. At least, the kind of bananas we’re used to now, the cavendish banana.

The fusarium fungus is slowly spreading through the world’s cavendish banana plantations, killing all of the plants.

11. It’s all relative.

Gasoline. I know everyone complains about the cost but…where I live it’s around $2.80 a gallon right now. A 2-liter of soda (half a gallon) is about $1.80.

A gallon of a non renewable fossil fuel is cheaper than the equivalent amount of fizzy sugar water.

10. Will life even be worth living?

Chocolate or coffee.

Explanation: due to warmer and drier conditions and fungal diseases, and rising demand

BUT, they arent going to go fully extinct, they MAY be a bit more expensive, but thats it.

9. You might have to hunt your own.

Its not cheap now but meat is gunna get real expensive in the next 10yrs.

That’s why I’ve been buying up as much raw beef as possible and hiding it under my mattress. Going to make a fortune in 2030, just wait

8. I hope you don’t have anything to hide.

Relatively speaking, privacy.

Does anybody have any?

No?

Thought not.

7. The U.S. is not exempt.

Basic food items.

With the drought hitting large chunks of the USA and other countries looks like it will be a bad harvest.

6. Gamers, head’s up.

Sealed Nintendo games.

Games in general really.

Lack of game preservation by companies in recent years (Nintendo just ignoring most of its backlog with the Switch, Sony getting a massive backlash for trying to pull the plug on the PS3 PSN store, which it seems like it won’t be the last time they attempt this considering they still went ahead and did that for the PSP despite the backlash), emulation still being stuck in a legal gray area that makes it easy for the sites hosting older games to be taken down, and disks/carts being destroyed due to neglect by owners, are all going to make the used game market insanely expensive.

If you have a local retro game store in your area, make sure to support them. They’re basically the only ones still making older games remotely affordable.

5. Small but important.

LM13700 operational transconductance amplifiers. They’re very useful little chips for guitar pedals and synthesizers, forming the basis for many classic voltage-controlled filters and voltage controlled amplifiers (and by extension, compressors). However, Texas Instruments announced the end of life of the LM13700 earlier this year. A few months from now, when retailers and suppliers have made and sold out of their last order, LM13700s are going to become very hard to find (and the price will increase accordingly).

I can sorta understand why they did it – OTAs in general have few applications outside of synths and guitar pedals, and commercial synths and pedals mostly use surface-mount components these days (which have a smaller form factor and can be easily assembled by machines, but are hard to solder by hand), so there isn’t much demand for a through-hole OTA anymore apart from DIY synth/pedal hobbyists. Maybe if we’re lucky, Alfa will launch a clone like they’ve done for discontinued synth chips in the past.

4. There’s always something new.

The next “healthy fad”.

Remember when aloé vera was in EVERYTHING?

Pretty sure the health industry is brewing the next it thing right now.

And açai berry- it was huge like 15 years ago or something.

It was in everything!

3. The poor bees.

Honest answer, maybe honey, because of the death rate of bees.

Also make sure your local and state governments protect local ecosystems!

Especially if they’re land that has never been developed (like remnant prairie or old growth forest)

2. A very real concern.

As South African I am very concerned about food prices.

The recent events of looting destroyed a lot of the storage and distribution facilities for food.

Where I lived prices are still normal but there is rumours that in certain places the price of bread increased 200% this week alone.

1. It’s at a premium.

Land.

I live in an area known for cheap land due to lack of economic opportunity.

They ran fiber internet and covid sent the cityfolk in, and its a new game now.

This really gave me some things to think about…

Did you agree with any of these? Disagree? Tell us what you think in the comments!