The bewildering phenomenon of declining quality - Airplane seats are getting smaller and smaller, clothes are unrecognizable after the second wash, and machines now answer our calls. Quality and care for craftsmanship seem to be things of the past

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It’s as if the smell of burnt plastic from a dollar store has permeated the world. Things are worse: chipboard furniture, T-shirts unrecognizable after a second wash, packaged foods with more preservatives than ingredients. Airplane seats turned into backrests. Automatic restroom lights that turn off at a whim. But also newspaper articles shamelessly written with ChatGPT and its algorithmic prose. Nothing is made to be loved. Only to be bought.

In a study titled The Concept and Measurement of Product Quality (1976), researcher E. Scott Maynes observed that quality is an inherently subjective concept, as it depends on the preferences of each consumer. Following his reasoning, it cannot be stated in absolute terms that an iPhone 15 is of “better quality” than a 2003 Nokia. For some consumers — although we know there won’t be many — the Nokia’s extreme durability may be more valuable than the iPhone’s technological innovations. Things aren’t worse, they just seem worse to us. But why?

“There is a pessimism that permeates a large part of the population, making everything seem inferior to us,” explains Javier Carbonell, deputy director of Future Policy Lab, a think tank focused on designing public policies to combat economic inequalities, over the phone. “This climate affects the judgments we make about the policies implemented and also the products and goods we consume.” According to the expert, the main factor driving this criticism is that the great promise of capitalism — if you work, you can have a decent life, buy a house, and go on vacation — is no longer being fulfilled; the social elevator has broken down. “Added to this is the impact of social media, which shows lives unattainable for most people,” he adds.

According to Carbonell, coordinator of the book La desigualdad en España (Inequality in Spain) (2024), the “culture of austerity” that emerged after the Great Recession (2008–2014) has been replaced by a “culture of efficiency,” embodied by Elon Musk, who champions a model aimed at minimizing costs. He first applied it at X (formerly Twitter) — where he laid off more than 75% of the workforce — and later, in the U.S. government.

He’s not alone: Mark Zuckerberg dubbed 2023 the “Year of Efficiency” and carried out massive layoffs at Meta. Amazon, like many other companies, has been gradually replacing human workers with robots and automated systems — to the point that in some of its warehouses, there’s no need to even turn on the lights.

When it comes to public services, the situation is different. Neither the pessimistic climate nor the supposed culture of efficiency alone explain why, between 2017 and 2022, the number of people with private insurance grew by 4% per year. According to the report The Healthcare System: Current Situation and Future Prospects, published in 2024, the main reason why Spaniards are turning away from the public healthcare system is the endless waiting lists.

Carbonell argues that, in absolute terms, healthcare services may not be worse than they were a few years ago. “The big problem is that they haven’t adapted to the pace of social change. They haven’t evolved enough to serve the entire elderly population, whose demographic size is increasing every year,” he argues.

There’s one conclusion that comes up repeatedly throughout this report: the perception that everything is of lower quality is more pronounced among older people. The reasons are varied. One is that attributes like durability — which used to be a major factor in how people judged a product’s quality — have lost relevance.

Psychologist Albert Vinyals, author of El consumidor tarado (The Disordered Consumer) (2019), recalls that years ago, the first thing car ads highlighted was their longevity. “Now we don’t even consider it,” he notes over the phone. “My grandmother, when she went to buy clothes, looked at the type of fabric they were made of. Now, no one knows what their pants are made of. Why would they? In a year, we’ll stop wearing them because they’ll no longer be fashionable.”

The textile industry perfectly illustrates this transformation in consumption patterns. As Marta D. Riezu, author of La moda justa (Fair Fashion) (2021), points out: “We consume clothing as if it were a disposable item.” In the last 20 years, textile production has doubled. In Spain, it is estimated that each citizen discards around 21 kilograms of clothing per year, according to the European Environment Agency.

Riezu explains via email that consumers’ growing preference for novelty over durability has created a generational divide in how quality is understood. “It’s a change in mentality that our grandparents (and some of our parents) don’t conceive or understand: buying to discard after a short time.” According to Riezu, the fast fashion industry encourages impulse and material reward. He warns: “There is no attachment, respect, or emotional journey with a garment you spend less than 20 years with.”

The dissonance between who we are now and who we used to be is reinforced by an even more powerful tension: the gap between who we are and who we want to be. While it’s only natural to blame multinational corporations for maximizing profit margins at the expense of consumers, and governments whose budget cuts have strangled already depleted public services, market logic is hard to dispute: things aren’t necessarily worse — they’re, to a large extent, exactly what we want them to be, or what we’ve been made to want. Put another way: it’s not the quality of things that’s declined — it’s us.


There’s a YouTube documentary about “planned obsolescence” with over a million views. It explains how some companies design certain products — especially household appliances — stop working after a certain period of time. This isn’t a conspiracy theory, but a proven fact. However, there’s another, lesser-known but even more effective method: convincing consumers that a product is outdated for aesthetic or symbolic reasons, even if it still works. This phenomenon is called “perceived obsolescence.” For example, Vinyals mentions young people who refuse to rent an apartment because it has old furniture, even though the material it’s made of is more durable and sturdier than the IKEA furniture they’ll ultimately end up investing in.

“Advertising and subliminal messages have turned human beings into zombies with no other goal than consumption,” says Juan Villoro in No soy un robot (I Am Not a Robot) (2024). A zombie who, moreover, has no time to waste. Rushing around and shopping for convenience are, according to Vinyals, another of the “pathologies” of the modern consumer. He questions why, instead of going to the market or the fruit stand, we prefer to buy tasteless tomatoes at the 24-hour supermarket next door. Why we spend $3 on a carton of juice instead of squeezing oranges, when we know the industrial version is made from concentrate. “Perhaps the best-known example of buying for convenience is paying around €75 per kilo for coffee just because it comes in capsules,” says Vinyals.

When did we stop having standards? That’s the question historian Wendy A. Woloson explores in Crap: A History of Cheap Stuff in America (2022). It all began in the mid-19th century. Before that, very few people owned many things. Objects were typically multifunctional: a table might serve as a work surface by day and a dinner table by night. Things were cared for and repaired — an old housecoat might become a child’s pair of pants. But as markets expanded and mass production took hold, cheaper and more accessible goods began to appear. “People were enchanted by the mix of variety and low price, as if they’d stumbled upon a secret treasure at minimal cost,” Woloson explains via email.

Over time, fashion trends fused with cheap products, and buying something new became almost mandatory. There was no longer any excuse not to have “the latest thing,” because it was within reach of almost everyone. As Woloson explains: “We have embraced this degraded material world, sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously. The things we need to live our lives — to do our work, to express ourselves, to understand who we are, and to forge relationships with others — are fundamentally cheap and alienating.”

Paradoxically, this overabundance of things makes us poorer: “Like our objects, interactions and ways of thinking have become mediocre: superficial, ephemeral, and degraded.”

Technology can improve product quality, but it can also increase mediocrity and flaws. Artificial intelligence is a clear example of this. In just a few years, companies have handed over much of their customer service to algorithms and robots. According to a 2024 report by the software company Salesforce, 62% of these services in Spain are already automated. Today, it’s easier to converse with a machine than with a real person. The problem is that no one likes these systems: according to a study by the Cetelem Observatory published last October, five out of 10 consumers openly reject virtual assistants. The conclusion is clear: society isn’t adapting to the pace of technological advancement.

José Francisco Rodríguez, president of the Spanish Association of Customer Relations Experts, admits that a lack of digital skills can be particularly frustrating for older adults, who perceive that the quality of customer service has deteriorated due to automation. However, Rodríguez argues that, generally speaking, automation does improve customer service. Furthermore, he strongly rejects the idea that companies are seeking to cut costs with this technology: “Artificial intelligence does not save money or personnel,” he states. “The initial investment in technology is extremely high, and the benefits remain practically the same. We have not detected any job losses in the sector either.”

There are other harms caused by artificial intelligence that are rarely discussed. For example, a key tool gained from the internet — real opinions from other users — has been rendered useless. A 2020 analysis by Fakespot of 720 million Amazon reviews revealed that approximately 42% were unreliable or fake. This means that almost half of the reviews we consult before purchasing a product online may have been generated by robots, whose purpose is to either encourage or discourage purchases, depending on who programmed them.

Artificial intelligence itself could deteriorate if no action is taken. In 2024, bot activity accounted for almost half of internet traffic. This poses a serious problem: language models are trained with data pulled from the web. When these models begin to be fed with information they themselves have generated, it leads to a so-called “model collapse.”

It’s difficult to prove that today’s products are worse than those of 20 years ago. Many products are hard to compare due to the enormous price difference. According to Flyersrights, in recent decades, the space between airplane seats has decreased by up to 15 centimeters. But at the same time, flying in the United States now costs more than $200 less than it did three decades ago.

The real problem isn’t buying pants that don’t last or traveling in an uncomfortable plane. The real problem is that, with each purchase, we support two of the most polluting industries on the planet. The production and purchase of low-quality products is not sustainable. For Marta D. Riezu, a truly good product “contributes something useful to society. It’s linked to ethics, effort, and commitment.”
 
I mean, anyone who's not a dumb fucking idiot knows what's going on. Wages are stagnant and continue to stagnate thanks to central banks devaluing money during bullshit crises like covid, migrants working for bottom dollar, and production of everything being offshored. The actual costs of the materials to make these things, from houses to cars to common furnishings haven't changed. Our real wages and resultant purchasing power has never been lower.
If business firms aren't "incentivized" to bring jobs back and all put on that even playing field to compete accordingly, then their slave labor pool needs to be "incentivized" to get on planes or barges back to where they come from. There's no other way to turn this around.
 
The thing that pisses me off is clothing wearing out so quickly now, especially casual clothing. I enjoy wearing band t-shirts. If you got went to see a band live 20 or 30 years ago (or more) and bought one of their tour shirts, odds are it's still kicking around in a drawer somewhere. It might be a bit faded, but you can still see the printing on it just fine. Now you'll be lucky to get six months out of it before holes start appearing and the printing either fades away or peels off. And thats not even talking about getting one off Amazon or from one of the many graphic tee shops online, but official merch from either a live show or the band's official site.

Cars are another one. You got a car from the 50s or 60s and it was built to last as long as you took care of it. Most of the stuff on it could be repaired by the owner in his own garage. If you got really high mileage on the motor you might need to have it rebuilt at some point. And cars back then had soul. A car from that era could survive an EMP just by replacing the starter solenoid. Not today. You're lucky if you can even change you own oil in a modern car, and forget about doing any actual repairs unless you have the training, specialized tool, and diagnostics machinery. Not with all the computers and sensors. The only thing I will give modern cars over the pre-70s oil crisis cars is that modern cars generally have more efficient engines that provide better power output for their displacement (you've got V6 engines now that can hang with a 426ci Hemi from the late 60s), and I do like some of the modern conveniences like SatNav and Bluetooth connectivity.
 
My biggest gripe is that in an effort to cut material usage? The "large" T-shirts no longer fit actual large people...... I have to buy 2XLs to have any hope of them fitting after a couple washings, and I haven't grown/gotten bigger in the intervening years.. .they've just decided to use less material without changing the tags.... so that an "L" fits the "smallest" of the entire "L" range only.... and only then? Right off the rack, not after shrinkage is accounted for.

The "plasticizing" of everything sucks too.

When I was a kid? You bought a simple garden trolley wagon? It had actual wheels, tires and bearings mounted on a common axle. It all rolled smooth like a regular bike and could take some abuse. Nowadays? It has chunky one-piece plastic wheels they didn't even clean the flashing off of, and a single cheap bolt and nut holding it on to just one side. It sticks and jerks, refuses to roll with any substantial load, bends out of shape if you hit a rock, and when the non-bearing plastic-on-metal surface wears out? Its junked because you can't repair it. But they want $180 for it. Fuck that.
 
Cars were thoroughly clapped out at 20k miles until the 80s, what are you on about? lmao. Ford didn't even install 6 digit Odometers until the '90s. My Foxbody doesn't have a 6 digit odometer.
They were easier to repair when they broke, and parts were cheaper, he's right on that.

But otherwise? Yes, your average car did not last much beyond 50K mechanically. There's a reason vehicles as recently as the mid 80's only had five digit odometers.... they did not expect you to hit 100k.

And even if you took religious care of the motor? The rest of the car would rot away around it by the 5 - 8 year mark.

Fenders rusting out, frames rusting through, cars "doglegging" down the road as the hard points for the suspensions rusted apart, floors you could see daylight through, rotten hard points on the body leading to leaky windshields, rattling dashboards, and doors that wouldn't shut straight all were common because all that metal everyone (including me TBF) like that makes a "REAL" car? Rusts.....
 
planned obsolescence. why make a quality product where you only get paid once when you can make a shit or not so shit product that breaks after a few years. which encourages customers who've already bought a product to come back and buy it again and again.

enshittification comes in when you outsource your manufacturing to china and other nations. Those places pay workers pennies on the dollar for a day's labor. They cut as many corners as possible when it comes to safety and quality.

You're seeing why companies do this with the case of Instantpot.

The line must always go up. Instantpot mafe a great product that you only ever need to buy once. They still made 350 million this year but thats bad because it's down from previous years. Line must always go up, which means you can't make a good product that lasts forever. It's gotta break so you have to buy another so line always go up.
 
I know the kids don't have a frame of reference but old shit used to LAST. Grandpa still had a fridge from after the war and it was going when he passed in the 2000s. Things were built out of better quality materials because they didn't have the modeling/molding techniques to cut it all away and build out of plastic and trash. Stuff was also way less complex because it wasn't loaded with electronic bullshit kept 6 inches from a bucket of water in an unventilated compartment and the pumps had some headroom. Now everything is designed meticulously to last it's warranty period and then keel over and die. Half of it is due to stuff like the EPA forcing them to use as little energy as possible (no headroom, more strain).... which just forces the manufacturing and shipment of more stuff (that costs much more energy!) which is probably want they really want. The whole thing is a racket.

Don't even get me started about cars, where the most egregious consumer practices are ubiquitous. When I was a kid you kept cars for 15 -20 years! and we are talking about 90's shit boxes!
 
Cars overall are better than ever. Medical care is better than ever, from personal experience.

The other day watched a gentleman install a screen door on a neighboring apartment. Took his time, did a great job. Have seen other tradesmen work at the apartments, always do a good job.
But those are services and traditional tradesmen. Cars have to be well built or they're a danger, which 'get it done' types like Elon Musk tried to skirt around (Tesla has been shady with crash reports and defects). Medical care requires all kinds of precautions to be safe or it's malpractice lawsuits. Tradesmen have to keep a reputation for good service, which can't be replaced by automation or corner cutting.

What this article is talking about is how consumers and consumer culture have adapted around each other to create a wasteful, faddish society that grew to value prestige and hype over value and quality. When the demand and need for quality declines, people are naturally drawn to bargains, cheaper, less sturdy items for less immediate cost, which the company thus assumes is a buying habit, not an economic factor. Thus both the consumer and the company enter into a mutual spin of end-stage capitalism behaviour.

Another example would be computers. I have three sensible choices for a new laptop, Mac, Linux, Microsoft. Mac had no flexiblity, I have no experience with Linux, so the choice is Microsoft - except now I have to suffer a downgrade with a less intuitive, less customizable and clunker operating system that has a bunch of mandatory programs and inbuilt links I don't want, and now all the old Microsoft programs are overpriced subscription services that basically amount to cloud storage. People should be yelling at Microsoft daily that this is a shitty unwanted idea, but they do it because it keeps them competitive, and people who just want a working computer will roll their eyes and buy it anyway even though they're paying more for less and start to expect it.

Same with call up services which the article mentions. They used to at least hire real people to stall you into cancelling your subscription, now they use machines that struggle to understand you and put up operating fees on top of that. It's penny pinching from moneymen who have trained customers to accept less and less even as their shareholder expectations go up. I know it's particularly bad in America but it's the same in Australia too.
 
My grandma has a car she bought in the 60s that still runs smoothly to this day. It’s reliable, sturdy and even survived a couple of collisions.

My mom’s digital camera from 1997 still works like a charm.

I have vintage winter boots from the late 80s I bought from a thrift store that are still holding up just fine after five years. Many old, vintage clothing of mine still holds up after many years.

Enshittification of everything coincides with mass outsourcing by corporate scum trying to save a dollar who don't care about quality.
 
Clothes are terrible now.
lot of people who buy "fast fashion" started doing it after full-price, regular clothes that were $50-100 per piece self-destructed within a few washes.
I sew, when Ive got time. I did it more when the children were small. The clothes I made them lasted being handed down through multiple children, worn, and most are still OK. The clothes I buy, even if they’re not cheap, don’t. I also think washing machines now all have the eco settings that wreck clothes to save water. And tumble dryers wreck clothes too.
I cannot find good quality socks anywhere. They’re all mixes of fibres, there are no pure cotton socks anywhere on rhe high steer, and they’re all thin as rights these days. There are VERY few pure natural fibre content items. Everything’s bloody viscose which washes terribly.
I have cheap T shirts from primark that I bought for two quid each decades ago that are still in good shape.
Very few things are decent quality now. Everything breaks, or is shit.
 
Another example would be computers. I have three sensible choices for a new laptop, Mac, Linux, Microsoft. Mac had no flexiblity, I have no experience with Linux, so the choice is Microsoft - except now I have to suffer a downgrade with a less intuitive, less customizable and clunker operating system that has a bunch of mandatory programs and inbuilt links I don't want, and now all the old Microsoft programs are overpriced subscription services that basically amount to cloud storage.
People REEEEEE about Windows and doomsay about the death of Microsoft every time there's a new version, but 8 really was the last good version. 10 and 11 are just bloat and ads. They're horrible. It's making me seriously consider just living with the jank of Linux. At least Linux doesn't constantly shit popups all over my screen trying to get me to buy fucking Xbox Game pass.
 
Soon: Did humans ever fly through the sky:? No, it's impossible. The idea that humans could build machines that fly through the sky is a white supremacist conspiracy theory. Despite being thoroughly debunked by multiple peer reviewed scientific papers, these racist nazis continue their dangerous attacks on our democracy. However, the tide is turning. A new law ...
 
I'm not sure you can buy a truly good quality dishwasher anymore. A local repairman told me you're lucky to get 8 yrs out of one.
If you spend a little extra and get good stuff, it tends to last a long time.
Buy hardwood furniture from Amish craftsmen if you can. They have companies that sell it in more states than you'd think.
 
I inhereted a bunch of my grandmas furniture

That shit was old when I a kid and its still here.

I have waaaay too many desert rose plates though.

I had a friends little brother who when it was time for him to move out and have his own place had a dream to have super duper minimalism.

You know the meme about single men living with a chair and tv and thats it?

like beyond that.

Sadly his mom and girl friend found a bunch of shit to pack into the house
 
Back in the 80s they couldn't build relia........
mercedes-benz-celebrates-40th-anniversary-of-the-legendary-w123-e-class_5.webp
 
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