Business How the Economy Changed: There's No Bargains Left Anywhere - A Charles Hugh Smith joint


What changed in the economy is now nobody can afford to get by on working-class wages because there's no longer any bargains.

The economy has changed in many ways, and it's difficult to track the glacial movements over decades. One change that few seem to recognize or discuss is the disappearance of bargains: cheap rent, cheap meals at hole-in-the-wall restaurants, cheap transport, cheap travel, cheap services--all gone.

Back in the day, even stupidly expensive cities like San Francisco had working-class districts with cheap rent and cheap eats. One reason the hippie movement arose in San Francisco was the availability of cheap places to rent in what many would dismiss as rundown slums or ghettos. There were plenty of working-class hole-in-the-wall restaurants and cafes that served cheap plates of spaghetti, turkey legs and other affordable fare.

The working-class districts in cities have long been gentrified, or more recently, abandoned to homeless encampments. Gentrification eliminates cheap rents, as the soaring valuations of real estate leads the new owners to charge high rents in order to pay their lofty mortgages.

Affordable apartments disappear, and so do affordable small commercial / retail spaces for hole-in-the-wall bookstores (remember when these were commonplace?), cafes, odd little niche retailers, and low-cost services (shoe repair, etc.)

The extermination of low-cost commercial space eliminated many services which are no longer available, a trend that feeds the "waste is growth" Landfill Economy: there's nobody left to repair anything or move second-hand goods, so everything that once could have been repaired or re-used is tossed in the landfill, replaced by a shoddy, crapified replacement product of the global economy.

One person's affordable housing is another person's slum or ghetto. Urban Renewal destroyed affordable housing and vibrant ethnic neighborhoods, in the name of "improvement" which ended up displacing those who could no longer afford soaring rents.

The end result is many people are spending half or 2/3 of after-tax earnings on rent. Personally, I was only able to work my way through college because there were still nooks and crannies of low-rent dives and rooming houses, and low-cost hole-in-the-wall restaurants and cafes, day-old baked goods outlets, etc.

Lowering the cost of credit for corporations, financiers and the wealthy created unprecedented competition for places to invest all this nearly free money, and real estate has long been a favored market for those seeking to increase income and appreciation by gentrifying low-cost properties.

The net result is nobody can afford to start a business because rents, insurance, fees, utilities and regulatory compliance are all unaffordable, And so downtowns and once vibrant retail streets are half-empty or abandoned. All the little cafes, services, second-hand stores are all gone because these are inherently low-margin businesses that can't afford rent in the thousands per month.

Something else changed, too: the proprietors who operated these small, affordable businesses are gone. The proprietors could charge affordable rates for their services because their own cost of living was low. Once the cost of living skyrocketed, they could no longer afford to get by on the meager earnings of their affordable enterprise. So they sold their building, or retired and moved out of the city to cheaper regions.

Who's left who wants to work the long hours needed to operate small enterprises, and rely on uncertain / low net income? Very few people are willing to take these risks, and few can afford to take these risks.

Financialization--and the resulting competition of those with unlimited access to low-cost credit for real estate to "develop"--eliminated all the bargains. Once rents soared, nobody could afford to offer bargains. The price of everything soared and those with cheap rents were forced out of business by rising rents and gentrification.

What changed in the economy is now nobody can afford to get by on working-class wages because there's no longer any bargains. Life used to be good for those with modest incomes because there were still bargains to be had. Not any more. Life is now a struggle because it's no longer affordable.

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Not everyone is suffering, of course. The corporations selling junk products and services are doing just fine:

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As are those who own 90% of the income-producing assets:

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I have fundamental issues with the author's premise, because a few slophouses along Pacifica is absolutely not why the hippie movement coalesced around San Francisco.
It's because the drugs were widely available and dirt cheap. The Haight was already pretty expensive in the mid 1960's and moon units lived 6 to a room in and around it so they could be near the scene, man.
It's why they made communes hundreds of miles away from the city proper once they established a good pipeline for getting the drugs. It's why for all it's myth and mystery in pop culture the scene seemed to rely on dudes whose parents had an estate in Los Altos or Marin for people to go on proper trips in.
 
Not everyone is suffering, of course. The corporations selling junk products and services are doing just fine:
If I own a business, and I make a margin of $5, but then prices for everything goes up and I double the price so now my margin is $10, it'll look like I'm making twice as much in profits but my margin is the same.
Am I insane for thinking this? Where can I see the increase in corporate profits in terms of percentages and not raw dollars affected by inflation?
Someone convert this to silver for me so things make sense.
 
If I own a business, and I make a margin of $5, but then prices for everything goes up and I double the price so now my margin is $10, it'll look like I'm making twice as much in profits but my margin is the same.
Am I insane for thinking this? Where can I see the increase in corporate profits in terms of percentages and not raw dollars affected by inflation?
Someone convert this to silver for me so things make sense.
Its clown world. We've been living in a zombie economy since 2008. Living off of free money from the fed. The folks in the c-suites only care for the line on their profits and valuation going up. If the stock goes down, people buy the dip. There's no such things as a pull back in the market.
 
You know how everyone complains about the price of everything? Inflation is an issue. But the other reason is they aren't selling as much as they used to. There are less people buying it. Now I know what you are thinking "well according to Capitalist market economics if something isn't selling then it should be cheaper". That's true, if something is plentiful it should be cheap. But that's not what is going on. Instead of things getting cheaper they are just doubling or even tripling the price and selling it to less people. They are still making the same amount of money, but less people are buying it.

You kind of figure this out when you take time to look at how the world works and especially if you have ever bought something on the internet and they tell you not to bother shipping it back. I have had this happen quite a few times. The stuff they make overseas is so fucking dirt cheap they don't even care if they get it back. It's not worth it to ship it back.
 
I had better quality (in terms of fabric, cut, and construction) clothes from the Gap clearance rack 20 years ago than I do now spending $100-500 on items from Nordstrom.

I bought a dress from the Gap last year (give me rainbows) and it looks like an intermediate sewing project by a tenth grader.

ETA: you can’t find lined trousers for women anywhere at the regular mall retailers. I wore a pair of silk-lined wool trousers from the Limited around the year 2000 that I definitely did not spend more than $60 on.
 
What's gonna happen eventually is people doing exactly what they do in 3rd-world shitholes. More street vendors. More 'street' biz. Expect to see Jamal learning how to raise chickens in his own apartment because there's a demand for that shit. And no, they won't play nice with taxes either.
 
The stuff they make overseas is so fucking dirt cheap they don't even care if they get it back. It's not worth it to ship it back.
If you're talking about China, they can afford free shipping to the U.S. because we pay for the costs through taxes. I'll bet sending products back wouldn't be subsidized.
 
yeah prices are up, but no shit there aren't bargains at Outback and other overpriced chain dogshit
cook at home you fucking mong
Buying food in the grocery store is usually just as expensive or the same price as eating out. Then you don't have to cook and clean up a mess. It's just easier and cheaper to go out for dinner or have it delivered. After you get done working your second or third low paying shitty job I imagine no one wants to stand around and cook.

Opening up a jar or tomato sauce and dumping it on spaghetti strings isn't cooking. I doubt that can be healthier than eating out considering all the corn syrup they like to put in stuff in jars and cans.
I had better quality (in terms of fabric, cut, and construction) clothes from the Gap clearance rack 20 years ago than I do now spending $100-500 on items from Nordstrom.

I bought a dress from the Gap last year (give me rainbows) and it looks like an intermediate sewing project by a tenth grader.

ETA: you can’t find lined trousers for women anywhere at the regular mall retailers. I wore a pair of silk-lined wool trousers from the Limited around the year 2000 that I definitely did not spend more than $60 on.
I have some Champion sweatpants from the late 2000's. I recently bought some and the new ones are total shit. They are no better than the cheap ones you can get from Hanes or Fruit of the Loom for way less. All the clothing made in the last 5 years or so has seen a drastic drop in quality. I bought some Hanes shirts, and the collar wasn't sewn on right. It was crooked.
What's gonna happen eventually is people doing exactly what they do in 3rd-world shitholes. More street vendors. More 'street' biz. Expect to see Jamal learning how to raise chickens in his own apartment because there's a demand for that shit. And no, they won't play nice with taxes either.
Raising animals is too much work for a nigger. The niggers and beaners will just keep doing their crimes. You can add kidnapping to the list. They will attempt to kidnap the people they consider rich. It what happens in Brazil. It's why the rich in Brazil like to travel around in helicopters.
If you're talking about China, they can afford free shipping to the U.S. because we pay for the costs through taxes. I'll bet sending products back wouldn't be subsidized.
I'm talking about American companies like North Face and Dear Foam. I bought a jacket from North Face a few years back and the zipper was put on the jacket in a way that I couldn't get it to zip without a struggle. I called them and told them I wanted to exchange it and they said just keep it as a gift. They would refund my money and I could buy another one or something else. I bought two pairs of Dear Foam slippers, and they were too small though I bought the correct size. I got the same response. Keep them we will give you a refund.
 
Using quintiles is generally a smoke and mirrors thing, that top 20% is equivalent to the population of the UK, not some tiny amount of robber barons.
 
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