Overseas, the savings rate dropped 2.8 points (41.4 percent vs. the 2016 baseline of 44.3 percent) because of a lower average of the cost of living allowance (COLA) indices for the second quarter of fiscal 2020. For the U.S., the rate increased 0.8 points (20.7 percent vs. the 2016 baseline of 19.9 percent) propelled by savings increases in meat and produce. Percentages are rounded to the nearest tenth.
“For our customers, it’s all about the savings,” said retired Rear Adm. Robert J. Bianchi, Department of Defense special assistant for commissary operations. “And the value of the commissary benefit revolves around our ability to provide consistent savings. That’s why our Your Everyday Savings! (YES!) program is so important in helping us keep prices competitive on items our customers purchase the most.”
Patron savings figures specific to each geographic area indicate how much, on average, a patron could expect to save on grocery purchases in comparison with local grocers in that area. DeCA measures savings for a region so it can better monitor how much commissary patrons actually save in the geographic area in which they shop.
DeCA employs a third-party contractor to collect pricing for a representative market basket of goods surveyed at about 25 percent of U.S. commissaries each quarter. The agency compares prices with up to three commercial grocers, including one supercenter, in the local area of each commissary in the United States. The price comparisons ensure that service members and their families are saving money when they shop their commissary.
Because the cost of living varies by geographic region, Congress requires DeCA to report on savings regionally. The savings comparison measures about 38,000 items at a regional level through the use of syndicated data and local prices on about 1,000 products through manual shops described above. This is representative of a shopper’s typical market basket.
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