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David Sirota
David Sirota
25 May 2012
A Rare Admission That Money Trumps Everything Else

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18 May 2012
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11 May 2012
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The High Cost of Low Price

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First, it was the new $200 printer — within hours of being extracted from its bubble-wrap womb, the contraption started making an awful wheezing sound.

Then it was the $10 stopwatch we bought to time my wife's labor contractions — the moment it was torn out of its blister package, its digital screen flamed out.

Then it was our 3-year-old $500 television — the fuzzy lines started during late-night "Seinfeld" reruns and haven't stopped.

And finally, it was the $25 lamp for my e-book reader — the light looked so useful ... until it started emitting a hideous blue tint.

Welcome to my most recent teeth-clenching weekend spent in return lines at discount electronics stores — a weekend no doubt typical in what journalist Ellen Ruppel Shell calls the current age of "Cheap." In her new book by that name, she argues that our economy has been reorganized around goods that sacrifice craftsmanship on the altar of low price.

Weekends like mine prove her point — and they represent a relatively new economic phenomenon. Whereas Great Depression America valued well-made utilitarian products and understood the inherent danger of bargain culture, Great Recession America prioritizes discounts at the expense of everything else.

This shift from heirloom sensibilities to today's throwaway mindset has brought us a full-fledged ethos of Cheap — one that offers both a self-reinforcing logic and an illusory promise of social status. We can see this most clearly in the ubiquitous realm of electronics.

At the level of logic — i.e., the level of Best Buy showroom decisions — Cheap seems to make financial sense. The printer may quickly die, but why worry if printer prices keep dropping? New televisions may last only half as long as they once did, but what's the big deal if those televisions now cost a third of what they used to? And why spend more on higher-priced electronics that pledge reliability when Cheap is now so pervasive you feel like your extra cash would end up buying a brand logo rather than a genuinely better product?

Then again, many purchases aren't made with such calculated logic.

We know this because in tough times, logic would warrant a focus on low-priced necessities. Instead, The Wall Street Journal reports that Americans are now "spending more on electronics like iPads and flat-screen televisions and less on durable goods like furniture, washing machines and lawn mowers."

Cheap, in other words, is operating most powerfully at the subconscious level, where semiotics reign supreme. We can no longer afford to show off with Corvettes and McMansions, so we now show off with less expensive smartphones and home theaters. In that sense, the bizarre obsession with moderately priced vanity gadgets is part of a living-standard masquerade at the twilight of middle-class prosperity. It doesn't matter if the electronic bling works well or lasts long. Its value is not utility — it is the ability to feign class equality in a country of crushing stratification and rising poverty.

All of this, of course, comes with serious consequences. Some are obvious — for instance, environmental degradation from excessive waste or larger long-term expenses from repeated replacement purchases. Some are more indirect — such as low wages from the low-price business model. And still others are nearly invisible — say, the deleterious psychological effects of a society trying to keep up with the Joneses.

As Shell's book subtitle rightly suggests, there is indeed a "high cost of discount culture" beyond the soul-crushing pain of customer-service purgatory and weekends ruined by big-box stores. It is the high cost of Cheap we don't think much about — a cost that increasingly eliminates any benefits of low price.

David Sirota is a best-selling author whose upcoming book "Back to Our Future" will be released in March of 2011. He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
What you report is only the tip of the iceberg. It's a much deeper story. As we move past peak oil and financial Armageddon we have to think about the underlying problems which are very basic. I good place to start is a little book by Wendell Berry called "What Matters". Check it out at:
http://www.amazon.com/What-Matters-Economics-Renewed-Commonwealth/dp/1582436061/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1289532610&sr=8-1
You might also be interested in the new modeling being done by Steve Keen, the Australian economist. It shows how our current economic system is inherently unstable, and how to fix it. Check it out at:
http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/2010/10/08/ami-talks-in-flv-format/#
Comment: #1
Posted by: Elwood Anderson
Thu Nov 11, 2010 7:35 PM
I am, constantly, ridiculed for paying for good quality items and keeping them after the "shine wears off". Yet, these same detractors want to borrow these items from me, when their cheaply made items break. Stupid is as stupid does.
Comment: #2
Posted by: David Henricks
Fri Nov 12, 2010 11:39 AM
I am constantly ridiculed for NOT patronizing "big box stores." Sometimes I have to
drive as much as 60 miles, one-way, to purchase items at retailers owned by locals.
It's well worth it, as the store owner(s) are available when I need them and they know
enough not to stock junk that will simply ruin their operation over time.

I want to know whether Mr. Sirota has though about avoid the big box stores.
Jackie Wilson
Comment: #3
Posted by: Jacqueline Clark
Sun Nov 14, 2010 9:09 AM
I think much of this consumerism is used as a kind of narcotic. Buying stuff is a distraction from our everpresent (these days) troubles and gives us a (temporary) sense of power, "freedom", and control. Americans think capitalism is freedom, and they want to think they're free (the Corporations want them to think they're free, too). And, sometimes, cheap-s**t is all you can find.
As or me, I'm keeping my perfectly fine tube-TV, even though I have to adjust the "high-definition" rabbit-ears antenna every few minutes, just like we did back in the 60's.
Comment: #4
Posted by: waterflaws
Wed Nov 17, 2010 7:36 AM
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