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Some question pressure in U.S. to keep consuming

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Some question pressure in U.S. to keep consuming

By KATHERINE REYNOLDS LEWIS

Newhouse News Service

Economists are fretting that consumer spending might fall for the first time since 1991, pushing the United States into a recession.

Global stock markets are in turmoil, and with reason: American consumers account for about one-fifth of the world economy. The Federal Reserve Board's sudden interest rate cut and the stimulus package being debated in Washington both are aimed at keeping cash flowing from Americans' pocketbooks.

How did consumption — the willingness to buy food, clothes, cars, electronics, appliances and homes — become Americans' defense against economic collapse?

It wasn't always this way.

In the 19th century, the word "consumption" meant tuberculosis, notes Stuart Ewen, a historian at the City University of New York.

"The term consume ... meant to use up, to destroy, to lay waste. Consumption really was about destruction," Ewen said. "The idea of using things up in a world of scarcity was anathema. It was not celebrated."

Americans were more thrifty then, some historians say. And they bought food and goods made by shopkeepers they knew.

"The larger retailing interests realized that to expand their markets, they had to break that culture," said David Korten of Bainbridge Island, Wash., author of The Great Turning. "They set about systematically to do that and were very successful."

Disposable products

In the late 19th century, manufacturers began to produce products aimed at a mass market — pocket watches, condoms, razor blades, paper shirt fronts. In the early 20th century, they discovered that women control much of a family's spending, and started selling sanitary napkins, Kleenex and household appliances, said Giles Slade, author of Made to Break: Technology and Obsolescence in America.

As Americans started to buy throwaway products, often made by strangers in distant factories, manufacturers quickly saw the potential profit if customers treated a wider range of goods as disposable. They turned to convincing people to buy new things before the old ones wore out.

"This starts with the great idea of General Motors that people want to have new cars, which may differ from old cars only in cosmetic differences," said Richard Bailey, an English professor at the University of Michigan.

People who once thought of themselves as "customers," a word that connotes a personal relationship between seller and buyer, began to be treated as anonymous "consumers."

The field of advertising developed as marketers saw opportunity in selling things people desired, as opposed to things they needed. Journalist Samuel Strauss lamented this changing ethic, writing in the mid-1920s: "The American citizen's first importance to his country is no longer that of citizen but that of consumer."

Product designers began to talk openly about making goods less durable in order to encourage new purchases and saw such planned obsolescence as a strategy to end the Great Depression. They also incorporated aesthetics into basic goods, from bathroom fixtures to stoves, with the understanding that the fashion would change over time.

"It's a handy economic model for the manufacturers to develop an item that needs to be replaced every three years or every year," Slade said.

Ready market

After World War II, the economy was booming and companies found a ready consumer market for everything from nylon stockings to inexpensive watches.

The 1950s and '60s brought consumer sprawl and an obsession with homes: having the right car, the right kitchen appliances, the right furnishings.

"This is the period of time where being a consumer becomes not simply a way of life that is an entitlement of being an American. It also is a sign of loyalty," Ewen said.

"Middle-class life begins to be defined as spending money you don't have."

In the second half of the 20th century, department and chain grocery stores replaced independent retailers rooted in the community. Consumer spending continued to climb, from 62 percent of gross domestic product in 1981 to 70 percent last year, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.

None of this happens in isolation.

When Americans buy more from other countries than the U.S. produces for export, it creates a trade deficit — $811 billion in 2006 — and leaves excess dollars in the hands of foreign manufacturers. Some overseas investors use their dollars to buy U.S. assets, such as Treasury securities, stocks, even entire American companies. But those wary of the U.S. economy sell dollars in the foreign exchange markets, which drives down the value. That's why the dollar fell about 10 percent last year as the mortgage crisis unfolded.

A nervous world

And because the money that Americans spend fuels so much economic activity elsewhere — 19 percent of global GDP, according to 2006 statistics — any belt-tightening in the U.S. makes the world nervous.

While Americans buy foreign-produced goods, other nations eat up Americans entertainment, one of the few industries with a positive trade balance. But television also spreads consumer desire, displaying high-end products regardless of whether the viewer can afford them, critics say.

"The quest for money deepens our alienation, which advertisers then connect to and assure us their products will make up the deficit and make us feel connected and popular and acceptable, and that requires more money," Korten said. "It becomes a self-reinforcing cycle."

Spend and work less?

He is among activists decrying consumption and encouraging Americans to spend and work less.

A similar argument appears in The Story of Stuff, an online video by Annie Leonard that bemoans the impact consumerism has had on the environment and developing countries, where manufacturers exploit both raw materials and labor.

Americans throw out 99 percent of their purchases within six months, according to the video. And while it seems cheaper to replace a broken electronic device than to repair it, the gadget's low price doesn't reflect its true cost in loss of natural resources, health damage to workers and the pileup of waste, the video says.

"In the past three decades alone, one-third of the planet's natural resources base has been consumed," Leonard says in the video.

What would happen if everyone trimmed consumption?

"In the near term, we don't want consumers to rein in their spending too aggressively because then everything falls apart," Moody's Zandi said. "In the long term, it would be therapeutic if they reined in spending a little bit and saved more."

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headli...iz/5486909.html

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Timeline
Posted
Some question pressure in U.S. to keep consuming

By KATHERINE REYNOLDS LEWIS

Newhouse News Service

Economists are fretting that consumer spending might fall for the first time since 1991, pushing the United States into a recession.

Global stock markets are in turmoil, and with reason: American consumers account for about one-fifth of the world economy. The Federal Reserve Board's sudden interest rate cut and the stimulus package being debated in Washington both are aimed at keeping cash flowing from Americans' pocketbooks.

How did consumption — the willingness to buy food, clothes, cars, electronics, appliances and homes — become Americans' defense against economic collapse?

It wasn't always this way.

In the 19th century, the word "consumption" meant tuberculosis, notes Stuart Ewen, a historian at the City University of New York.

"The term consume ... meant to use up, to destroy, to lay waste. Consumption really was about destruction," Ewen said. "The idea of using things up in a world of scarcity was anathema. It was not celebrated."

Americans were more thrifty then, some historians say. And they bought food and goods made by shopkeepers they knew.

"The larger retailing interests realized that to expand their markets, they had to break that culture," said David Korten of Bainbridge Island, Wash., author of The Great Turning. "They set about systematically to do that and were very successful."

Disposable products

In the late 19th century, manufacturers began to produce products aimed at a mass market — pocket watches, condoms, razor blades, paper shirt fronts. In the early 20th century, they discovered that women control much of a family's spending, and started selling sanitary napkins, Kleenex and household appliances, said Giles Slade, author of Made to Break: Technology and Obsolescence in America.

As Americans started to buy throwaway products, often made by strangers in distant factories, manufacturers quickly saw the potential profit if customers treated a wider range of goods as disposable. They turned to convincing people to buy new things before the old ones wore out.

"This starts with the great idea of General Motors that people want to have new cars, which may differ from old cars only in cosmetic differences," said Richard Bailey, an English professor at the University of Michigan.

People who once thought of themselves as "customers," a word that connotes a personal relationship between seller and buyer, began to be treated as anonymous "consumers."

The field of advertising developed as marketers saw opportunity in selling things people desired, as opposed to things they needed. Journalist Samuel Strauss lamented this changing ethic, writing in the mid-1920s: "The American citizen's first importance to his country is no longer that of citizen but that of consumer."

Product designers began to talk openly about making goods less durable in order to encourage new purchases and saw such planned obsolescence as a strategy to end the Great Depression. They also incorporated aesthetics into basic goods, from bathroom fixtures to stoves, with the understanding that the fashion would change over time.

"It's a handy economic model for the manufacturers to develop an item that needs to be replaced every three years or every year," Slade said.

Ready market

After World War II, the economy was booming and companies found a ready consumer market for everything from nylon stockings to inexpensive watches.

The 1950s and '60s brought consumer sprawl and an obsession with homes: having the right car, the right kitchen appliances, the right furnishings.

"This is the period of time where being a consumer becomes not simply a way of life that is an entitlement of being an American. It also is a sign of loyalty," Ewen said.

"Middle-class life begins to be defined as spending money you don't have."

In the second half of the 20th century, department and chain grocery stores replaced independent retailers rooted in the community. Consumer spending continued to climb, from 62 percent of gross domestic product in 1981 to 70 percent last year, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.

None of this happens in isolation.

When Americans buy more from other countries than the U.S. produces for export, it creates a trade deficit — $811 billion in 2006 — and leaves excess dollars in the hands of foreign manufacturers. Some overseas investors use their dollars to buy U.S. assets, such as Treasury securities, stocks, even entire American companies. But those wary of the U.S. economy sell dollars in the foreign exchange markets, which drives down the value. That's why the dollar fell about 10 percent last year as the mortgage crisis unfolded.

A nervous world

And because the money that Americans spend fuels so much economic activity elsewhere — 19 percent of global GDP, according to 2006 statistics — any belt-tightening in the U.S. makes the world nervous.

While Americans buy foreign-produced goods, other nations eat up Americans entertainment, one of the few industries with a positive trade balance. But television also spreads consumer desire, displaying high-end products regardless of whether the viewer can afford them, critics say.

"The quest for money deepens our alienation, which advertisers then connect to and assure us their products will make up the deficit and make us feel connected and popular and acceptable, and that requires more money," Korten said. "It becomes a self-reinforcing cycle."

Spend and work less?

He is among activists decrying consumption and encouraging Americans to spend and work less.

A similar argument appears in The Story of Stuff, an online video by Annie Leonard that bemoans the impact consumerism has had on the environment and developing countries, where manufacturers exploit both raw materials and labor.

Americans throw out 99 percent of their purchases within six months, according to the video. And while it seems cheaper to replace a broken electronic device than to repair it, the gadget's low price doesn't reflect its true cost in loss of natural resources, health damage to workers and the pileup of waste, the video says.

"In the past three decades alone, one-third of the planet's natural resources base has been consumed," Leonard says in the video.

What would happen if everyone trimmed consumption?

"In the near term, we don't want consumers to rein in their spending too aggressively because then everything falls apart," Moody's Zandi said. "In the long term, it would be therapeutic if they reined in spending a little bit and saved more."

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headli...iz/5486909.html

F$%# the "buy! buy! buy! / throw away" culture! F#$@ Big Business!

Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. ####### coated bastards with ####### filling. But I don't find them half as annoying as I find naive bobble-headed optimists who walk around vomiting sunshine.
Filed: Country: Pitcairn Islands
Timeline
Posted
"In the near term, we don't want consumers to rein in their spending too aggressively because then everything falls apart," Moody's Zandi said. "In the long term, it would be therapeutic if they reined in spending a little bit and saved more."

"But why save when Capital One sent me six applications this week for Platinum cards?!! Why wait when I can have it now?!"

Filed: Country: United Kingdom
Timeline
Posted
"In the near term, we don't want consumers to rein in their spending too aggressively because then everything falls apart," Moody's Zandi said. "In the long term, it would be therapeutic if they reined in spending a little bit and saved more."

"But why save when Capital One sent me six applications this week for Platinum cards?!! Why wait when I can have it now?!"

Yeah, what the hell is this saving business, eh? Sheesh!

 

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