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 just explained the cost of the potato fucktard.

I will just go out and eat. I can get meal for under $15 at most places. I don't have to cook and clean.

Have fun with your SPAM and Ramen Boomer. LOLOLOLOLOL

I'm not paying $70 for a pair of sweatpants. I don't have Boomer money.
You are the biggest
Most retarded
Least useful nigger on this site.

Kill yourself you unkempt swine.

And film it so I can enjoy it while I clean my kitchen after eating fillet au poivre.

Doublenigger.
 
The big problem here is we had a fully globalized economy pre 2020. Because of this you were getting good from everywhere nations like Ukraine were very integral in second stage manufacturing and served as a jump off point for freighters.
Now many of those supply chains are falling apart and companies are trying to recoup profits to fix this. This is leading to shrinkflation, gouging and etc... now tack on the fact that certain states are making it harder to run a business like California or New York and want unreasonable amounts of money it's no secret why people are struggling.
 
I just explained the cost of the potato fucktard.

I will just go out and eat. I can get meal for under $15 at most places. I don't have to cook and clean.

Have fun with your SPAM and Ramen Boomer. LOLOLOLOLOL

I'm not paying $70 for a pair of sweatpants. I don't have Boomer money.
>Nazi larper advocates for eating cheap goyslop and throws a tantrum when shown that healthy home cooked meals are cheaper

The future saviors of the white race
 
I mean there's still some reasonably priced meals that one can bargain out the main thing is the cost of Time versus what you're saving. Sometimes it's cheaper just to spend a couple extra dollars so you don't waste time you already don't have not always but sometimes
 
I mean there's still some reasonably priced meals that one can bargain out the main thing is the cost of Time versus what you're saving. Sometimes it's cheaper just to spend a couple extra dollars so you don't waste time you already don't have not always but sometimes
Time saving is a good point but I find that cooking in an air fryer takes the same amount of time as waiting for fast food to get ready. My nightly dinner is an air fried chicken leg with paprika, salt, and pepper cooked in the air fryer for 15 min @ 400 and rice in the rice cooker. 3 dollars and I get a better meal without having to interact with anyone but my wife.
 
Time saving is a good point but I find that cooking in an air fryer takes the same amount of time as waiting for fast food to get ready. My nightly dinner is an air fried chicken leg with paprika, salt, and pepper cooked in the air fryer for 15 min @ 400 and rice in the rice cooker. 3 dollars and I get a better meal without having to interact with anyone but my wife.
It's usually cheaper for me not to eat breakfast out or dinner lunch is that gray area that usually grabbing a 5.99 value meal is good. Or maybe heading up some coupons on those apps that fast food restaurants steal your data for
 
I mean there's still some reasonably priced meals that one can bargain out the main thing is the cost of Time versus what you're saving. Sometimes it's cheaper just to spend a couple extra dollars so you don't waste time you already don't have not always but sometimes
Really depends on what you're cooking. I feel like social media has bent a lot of people to think that the "minimum" for home cooking is actually a lot higher than it is. Yea, once in a while I'll do a nice steak with sautéed mushrooms, caramelized onions, seared bell peppers, and beer/wine. But far more common is "Rice cooker on, put a piece of seasoned meat in a pan" and that's "good enough" for most days. Prep and cleanup is like 15 minutes, the rice cooks itself, and the meat is just standing over a pan listening to a youtube video for maybe ten minutes if its big. You can get a porkchop or piece of chicken breast for dirt cheap, and the rice is literally tens of cents per serving.

Get yourself a bunch of these simple lazy meals, and you can eat good and cheap most days. Hell, if your incredibly lazy you can bake a potato in a microwave.

It's usually cheaper for me not to eat breakfast out or dinner lunch is that gray area that usually grabbing a 5.99 value meal is good. Or maybe heading up some coupons on those apps that fast food restaurants steal your data for
One fried egg, and a mug of instant miso soup. Doesn't sound like much, but that soup will fill you right up and keep you full for a lot longer than you might expect. Takes like 6 minutes to cook, and a minute to rinse and scrub down the pan, mug and plate. Total price is like $2.
 
can get meal for under $15 at most places.
You mean you can get some absolutely dogshit food for you like a Big Mac and a side of fries for ~$15. A decent meal, from a decent restaurant, is both still going to take the 1/2 hour or more that you bitched about and be more expensive than $15. But even if you spent $10 bucks on every single meal by eating out, that's $30/day or $900/month. An absolutely absurd cost on food/month, to perhaps put it into a better perspective, if you made $15/hr in a normal working week, you're talking about spending over 1/3rd of your weekly income on food alone. It is literally not worth it unless you are making an absurd amount of money, or are a parasite on government welfare.
 
They're about to learn the same lesson as Marie Antoinette.
Don't count on it, they're trying to cope with retarded marketting studies and how unspoken rules work (you can break them cuz they're not actually rules guys! With no consequences teehee).

It's a special blend of retarded and intelligent academic faggotry.

Also I see people are still trying to do the whole "cooking at home is cheap guys teehee" cope. lmao.
 
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I just explained the cost of the potato fucktard.

I will just go out and eat. I can get meal for under $15 at most places. I don't have to cook and clean.

Have fun with your SPAM and Ramen Boomer. LOLOLOLOLOL

I'm not paying $70 for a pair of sweatpants. I don't have Boomer money.
Neither am I, I got all my pairs via the membership.... Which I then cancelled as I had enough workout or lounging clothes from them.
 
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Agree on the clothes. Everything is crap. Crap fabrics like viscose, polyester. Crap cuts, and terrible sewing. The latter really surprised me because industrially produced clothing is made on a line where each garment is passed between several people each of whom does ONE thing, like add some cover stitching, on a machine that’s set up perfectly for the task. It implies that even that level of setup is too hard for people now. The sizing errors are often because they cut massive stacks of cloth at the pattern cutting stage. If you put the pattern on top and your blade or laser or whatever is at even a slight angle there will be a significant difference in size between top and bottom of that stack.

Where ever we have out new sweatshops they’re not very good
The new sweatshops are in Bangladesh or SEA and the workers are paid something like $$5 a day.

They literally don't give a shit. The factory owners just race to the bottom on cost and "fast fashion" trash from Temu and Shein made for pennies on the dollar and are so trashy they don't even let you ship back damaged goods, they just refund you and tell you to throw them out.

Most "normal people" clothing are getting cost cut to levels worse than the most bargain big stuff from 30+ years ago.
 
How is cooking your own meals and not being wasteful of money cope? People have the weirdest positions. Enjoy your $15 pink slime cooked by Pablo instead of $3 dollar chicken.
Yeah so 60~70 bucks of a grocery bill per two weeks isn't cheap. So please go off about your bland 15 dollar steak and potatoes, missing the forest for the trees.

I cook because I want to, not because it's a cheap alternative, retards.
 
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.

I thought one of the the things that they might talk about is how thrift stores really aren't thrift anymore. This has been going on for a while before COVID (probably started post-2008) but in addition to being generally more expensive (I remember a simple ceramic bowl from Walmart was more expensive at a thrift store than if I actually bought it from Walmart), there's a whole breed of bottom-dwellers who will sweep through a thrift store, vacuum up anything of value, and resell them online for 3x the cost.
 
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