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Thread: A Comment about Consumers these days

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2001
    Location
    South Hero Vermont
    Posts
    4,746

    A Comment about Consumers these days

    I rec'd this in an email today - sobering, isn't it?

    "After years of buying gadgets, cars and whole wardrobes on credit, the
    gravy train has stopped. Not only has it stopped, it's derailed and is
    hurtling off of a cliff. Many people have locked up their purses and
    wallets, cut up their credit cards and stopped spending money. American
    consumers are spent.

    Every day it seems we are bombarded with a slew of figures detailing the
    low level of consumer confidence and how this holiday season is going to
    be one of deep discounts and little buying. Already, the list of stores
    that are closing reads like a who's who of chain retailers, like Circuit
    City and Linens-n-Things.

    Many people are eating out less, forcing them to cook dinner and actually
    talk to their families. Some aren't getting 900 channels on their
    televisions, so they're playing games, going for walks or reading. Others
    are putting money into savings accounts, meaning that when they want to
    buy a gadget, car or clothes, they will be spending money they have
    actually earned.

    How dare they!

    The media would have you believe that this is a terrible thing. Maybe I'm
    old-fashioned, but I was taught to save, invest and live within my means.
    This means buying a house with a substantial down payment and not
    overextending credit. Apparently, I'm in the minority on this one.

    Now, I certainly don't want our economy to go up in flames or grind to a
    painful halt, but I can't help but think that this reduction in spending
    is a good thing, at least in part. For years, many American consumers have
    made shopping into a hobby, some going to the mall weekly, or even daily,
    to purchase (mostly unneeded) stuff. I was beginning to worry that bargain
    hunting would become an Olympic sport.

    So it's only natural that eventually the tide would turn, that American
    consumers would put the brakes on and stop overspending. It makes sense
    that after years of living on credit and not saving a dime, many American
    consumers would stop, take stock of things and realize that such a
    lifestyle can't be sustained indefinitely.

    But things can go too far in the other direction just as easily. Not
    spending is not healthy for our economy, it will put people out of work
    and eventually the wheels of commerce will stop turning. While I might
    think that a return to a more conservative way of spending is a good
    thing, I wouldn't advocate a total end to the modern age of consumerism.

    What we need is to find a balance between overspending and not spending.
    Maybe a whole new wardrobe isn't necessary every season, but having a few
    new pieces of clothing probably won't break the bank. It's striking that
    balance that's going to help lead the U.S. economy out of the rut we've
    gotten it into, and, more important, keep us on a sustainable growth path
    going forward. OK, rant over."

    Sas

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Alberta, Canada
    Posts
    22,005
    Amen.

    Giving from our hearts, not our pocketbooks, would be a nice change.

    And the recipients love it more.
    "Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Lancaster, PA - USA
    Posts
    1,569
    Sadly... Most people understand this. The problem is that people who DON'T and lived a life WAY above their means, on credit, are going to be "bailed out". The healthy thing to do would be to let them fail.

    Worse... Our governement does not even remotely understand the concept of living within your means...
    "Unlike most of you, I am not a nut."

    - Homer Simpson


    "If the enemy opens the door, you must race in."

    - Sun Tzu - Art of War

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Posts
    12,662
    My comment will probably only serve to point up how old I am. I heard on the news the other day that people have been being approved for mortgage payments which equal 40-50% of their monthly family income. I remember back when hubby and I bought our first house in 1970 the typical mortgage payment could not exceed 25% of your monthly income. Also back then the mortgage company wouldn't consider my salary because it could stop coming in should little ones come into the picture (that was back in the days of stay-at-home moms). People were not running up their Visas and Mastercards because they were not yet on the scene. The only credit cards then were for retail stores. You simply saved up your money when you wanted to buy something. Those were some conservative times but much wiser times for sure and now you can tell just how old I am.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2000
    Location
    Los Angeles, CA USA
    Posts
    12,031
    Quote Originally Posted by Pam View Post
    My comment will probably only serve to point up how old I am. I heard on the news the other day that people have been being approved for mortgage payments which equal 40-50% of their monthly family income. I remember back when hubby and I bought our first house in 1970 the typical mortgage payment could not exceed 25% of your monthly income. Also back then the mortgage company wouldn't consider my salary because it could stop coming in should little ones come into the picture (that was back in the days of stay-at-home moms). People were not running up their Visas and Mastercards because they were not yet on the scene. The only credit cards then were for retail stores. You simply saved up your money when you wanted to buy something. Those were some conservative times but much wiser times for sure and now you can tell just how old I am.
    What a concept!!! Live within our means? Cut up the credit cards - actually SAVE??? Yes, Pam, now everyone can figure out how old both of us are....................but who cares.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Kentucky, LAND OF THE EASILY AMUSED
    Posts
    25,224
    Bite me!

    Us "old folks" remember the time when we paid cash for our purchases?

    If you didn't have cash, you could not afford it.

    T.V. that came from an antenna?

    No microwave ovens?

    Gas for 25 cents a gallon?

    A phone call was 10 cents from a booth?

    Drive in movies?

    Home cooked meals?

    Afternoon Newspapers for info?

    Milk delivered to your home?

    Cloth diapers?

    AM radio?

    Clothes without labels?

    Non-Organic food?

    It's not the government to blame-It's our own selfish desire to make our lives simpler.

    We kneel before everything that we believe will make life simpler.

    It's keeping up with the Jones-our thought that what we own and have make us more 'better' than the rest of the planet.

    --------
    Faster, easier!
    30 minute meals! GPS! Text messaging! On line shopping! Ebay!

    When the 'lights' go out see how impotent we are!

    UGH! The thought of having to interact with people!

    Us 'old people' will survive longer than the AHs who depend on electricity and tech in our lives.

    LOL,
    I have a manual can opener and plan to use it when the end of the world comes. God forbid I starve -I can open a can of raviolis when I get hungry.

    Luddites Unite!

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