Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.Greece Exit, Euro-Zone Collapse, Spain and Portugal Will Follow Within 6 Months - Nadeem_Walayat
2.Anti-Gold Propaganda Push, Gold Cover Clause for Enabling Competing New Currencies - Jim_Willie_CB
3.France and Greece Voters Reject Austerity for Money Printing Inflation Stealth Debt Default - Nadeem_Walayat
4.Q.E.3 IS COMING! Stock Market MAP Analysis Part 4 - 9Marc_Horn
5.Governing Elite Fraud and Theft Will Continue Until Morale Improves - James_Quinn
6.Is the World coming to an End? Stock Market MAP Waves Theory Explained, Part 3 - Marc_Horn
7.Gold Bull Market Climaxes - Zeal_LLC
8.Stock Market 'Sell in May, and Go Away,' Strikes Again - Gary_Dorsch
9.Facebook Will Always Be #2 To Google: That’s Why It’s Worth $30 Billion Not $100 Billion - Andrew_Butter
10.Global Debt Crisis, There Is Not Enough Money On Planet Earth - Ashvin_Pandurangi
Last 5 Days Analysis
Financial Crisis 2012, No, None of This Makes Any Sense - 16th Mar 12
14 Elliott Wave Trading Insights You Can Use Now - 16th Mar 12
How to Ride the Surge in Biotech Mergers & Acquisitions - 16th Mar 12
Stock Markets Remain Addicted to QE, Why We're Turning Japanese - 16th Mar 12
Mobile Wallet Technology: The New Barbarians are at the Gate - 16th Mar 12
What Was Global Warming ? - 16th Mar 12
Buy Britain’s Gold Back - 16th Mar 12
Turning Andrews Pitchforks into Predictable MAP Cycle Forks, MAP Analysis Part 6 - 16th Mar 12
The Coming Generational Storm, Living Beyond Our Children's Means and Doing Ponzi Proud - 16th Mar 12
Silver and Gold Daily Bulletin/COT Review for period 4-26 to 5/8/2012 - 16th Mar 12
The All-Important Question, Are Major Economies in Recovery? - 15th Mar 12
Sarkozy's Engame Economics - 15th Mar 12
Gold, Forex and Stocks Intermarket Analysis and Trading Chart Setups - 15th Mar 12
VIX Reflects Escalating Concerns About the Stock Market - 15th Mar 12
Special Report: How to Buy Silver - 15th Mar 12
JPMorgan Busted Bet Was No Chance Encounter - 15th Mar 12
New Technology Spots Crime Before it Happens - 15th Mar 12
France's Struggle For European Dominance - 15th Mar 12
Bundesbank Confirms German Gold Held By US, UK and French Central Banks - 15th Mar 12
High Risk of Near Term Global Financial, Stock Market Crash - 15th Mar 12 - Steven_Vincent
World Looking to China to Fire Up Its Economy - 15th Mar 12 - Frank_Holmes
A Contrarian's Guide to Volatile Precious Metals Markets - 15th Mar 12 - Bob Moriarty
The Death of Greece, Impact on Crude Oil Price - 15th Mar 12 - Kent Moore
Gold Turns Negative Year to Date, But Bull Market is Not Over - 14th May 12
Gold and Silver Major Bottom This Week? - 14th May 12
Financial Markets Head Firmly In The Sand! - 14th May 12
Global Stock Markets Turmoil on the Way? - 14th May 12
Greece, Discovering the "End" in "Extend & Pretend" - 14th May 12
Carbon, Low Carbon, And No Cash - 14th May 12
Stocks Bear Market Focus Point: Bull Trap confirmed – Six weeks is a long time for a Banker - 14th May 12
Gold and Gold Miners Are Closing in on a Major Bottom - 14th May 12
Stock Market Line In The Sand About To Be Tested - 14th May 12
Will Merkel Commit Political Suicide or Bail on the Euro? - 13th May 12
Stock Value and Dividends at Wall Cycle Lows - 13th May 12
Germany Waving the Euro-zone White Flag, Viva Los Rescates Financieros de los Bancos - 13th May 12
Stock Market Perched on the Edge - 13th May 12
Stock Market Downtrends Continue - 13th May 12
The Nightshade Nightmare - 13th May 12
Stock Market Forecast for Coming Week - 13th May 12
The Great Defection From The West From Debt Slavery Police States - 13th May 12
Gold $12,000 and Silver $1000, 20 years from now? - 13th May 12
Stock Market Short-term Intra-day Forecasts Free Access - 13th May 12
Greece Exit, Euro-Zone Collapse, Spain and Portugal Will Follow Within 6 Months - 12th May 12
How You Can Profit From the Natural Gas Market's Next Big Collapse - 12th May 12
Student Loans, The Next Bubble? - 12th May 12
Whe Are U.S. Treasury Bond Yields Going? - 12th May 12
Gold Bull Market Climaxes - 11th May 12
Stronger U.S. Dollar "Makes Gold Rally Difficult" - 11th May 12
Investing in Semiconductor Stocks: Three Chipmakers on the Upswing - 11th May 12
Everything You Need to Know About Gold Prices - 11th May 12
Gold ‘Will Go To 3,000 Dollars Per Ounce’ - 11th May 12
Does the West Have a Future? - 11th May 12
Global Debt Crisis, There Is Not Enough Money On Planet Earth - 11th May 12
The Power of Relative Value & the Silver Market! WOW! - 11th May 12
Gold, Silver and Profiting from Peoples Predictability! MAP Analysis Part 5 - 11th May 12
Five Consumer Staple Stocks For A Hearty Investment Portfolio With Yield - 11th May 12
Stock Market 'Sell in May, and Go Away,' Strikes Again - 11th May 12
Gold Questioning Fed's Effectiveness - 11th May 12

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Stock Market Short-term Forecasts - Free Access

My Two Cents - "The Complacent Consumer"

Economics / Debt & Loans May 28, 2007 - 06:07 PM

By: Andy_Sutton

Economics For a long time now as I've watched consumers collectively dig themselves into debt-oblivion, I have wracked my brain trying to figure out why they are doing it. Recently, what I will call consumerism seems to be escalating as we have watched demand for gasoline defy the laws of economics. Instead of focusing on the product, I think it is appropriate to spend some time reflecting on the mentality behind recent behavior. No doubt, consumerism has already been responsible for a number of coming financial debacles, most notably the housing collapse, the negative savings rate in this country, record levels of debt, and rising bankruptcies. This week I am teaming up with a popular My Two Cents contributor CJH from Maryland to take a look at American consumerism....


During a recent broadcast of your Blog Talk Radio show you left the audience with a closing thought on consumerism. I wondered to myself how there can really be such a high value placed on material items. If there is a sense of accomplishment from gaining possessions through hard work, then the value as the commercial for the credit card says, “It's Priceless.” But if an individual has to rely on credit to “acquire” then there is something amiss today. Where this transition began to take shape I'm not sure. Could it be based on impulse? Do consumers base some form of emotional gratification on having the “newest or best”? Are people at a time in their life when they are just starting out, looking towards retirement, or somewhere in between, acting as they have always done? Well the answers are probably quite mixed on these questions. If I was asked the same three questions, I might answer...”yes, sometimes I buy things on impulse, but not to extremes, and I plan major purchases. Yeah, I can think of things I've bought that make me feel happy.” Lastly, “I just handle my money the way that I've always done.”

The forces that drive consumerism from my point of view can be quite benign or down right aggressive. I believe a lot of this has to do with something widely overlooked or understated. It's not some government policy that has run a skew, or an excess of societal wealth, it comes down to a lack of good beginnings when taught about money and spending. But one of the biggest and most aggressive driving forces is marketing and advertising, the main reason this industry exists is to “sell, sell, and sell.” We are saturated on a daily basis from every angle with advertising, and it seems to be effective or companies wouldn't be using it as medium to grab our attention. So now you need the audience for the sales pitch. How will they react? For some it is buying till it hurts, while others just walk away, and say “I just don't have the means to buy it, maybe I'll wait.”

In the early 80's although commercial advertising and catalog sales still worked, a new market emerged. TV infomercials and shopping from home on TV became a popular medium for products to get sold. It was a wide open area for entrepreneurs and inventors to get the products seen. Most of the programming was shown late night, so development of this format stayed relatively modest. Then there was the creation of the 24 hour shopping networks. Now anyone with a credit card could shop right from the comfort of their living room whenever the felt the impulse to buy.

I think fondly back to the days of when I was a child and lived without having too much to worry about. The foundations I use as an adult for handling finances came from lessons I learned from my family. They seemed to always exercise self restraint and sound judgments when it came to handling money. It had true value just a short time ago. I remember that luxuries came along sometimes, like new toys, or family vacations, the new family car, etc. But they came when they were affordable and worked or planned for. Granted there was still advertising for all the newest products on the market, sales circulars in the Sunday paper, and the like. But for me the ultimate lure as a child was the time leading up to the holiday when the “wish book” catalog would find its way to family mailbox. I would spend hours looking at all the new cool stuff and making careful selections for my wish list of new things, while being mindful that they may all not be under the tree when we opened gifts.

These are the times that begin to formulate our feelings for our adult lives. Parents will indulge their children to a certain degree, but when the children always just get things given to them, then that's where the dangerous equation of “money equals stuff” starts to form. Through a child's eyes the important factors seem to get overlooked, such as “working equals money, and with money comes responsibility.” These lessons begin coming into light as we move into our teens and begin maybe opening savings accounts with money earned from chores, or when the first job is landed. So now is when the lines start to divide. Many start feeling that since they're earning money they should be spending it. Some look at this as being productive members of society, which is all well in good. But as the line splits the other path leads to just spending without reprise.

Being adults we can all think back to our childhoods and remember someone in the neighborhood who always had the newest bike, video game, or whatever cool buzz item there was out at the time. Some of us wished we had them to, but it may not always have been the case. In fact my parents have shared similar stories to when they were growing up in the 50's, and all the kids in the neighborhood would pack themselves into one living room down the street, since it was only house on the block to have color TV. Sure they probably had to deal with the same things, but not to the same degree as we do today. Have things changed in a big way, or what? Look at the vast majority of American households: we have multiple TV's, stereos, computers, and lots of other flashy gadgets. Then we come to fantastic invention of the internet, and the availability of virtually everything at the click of a mouse and a few keystrokes.

As a collective group human beings yearn for objects beyond basic survival needs, the tradition goes back to when we formed societies. The amount of goods a person had played into the status that they held, or so it was thought. I guess this still plays a heavy part today as well. That type of feeling seems to blur the line between “needing and wanting”, and more often than not, people just feel the “need” to have things. I'll be the first to admit that I like having nice things, and objects that support my interests, but I also exercise caution and live within my means. Most history tends to be cyclical, but this is one path that has stayed the course and run straight past any boundary.

CJH

There is no economic answer to this question. The answer lies not in the textbooks, but in the whims of the human mind. Certainly, economics is the study of human action, but not necessarily what drives those actions. To me, it would seem as though the value scales of society have been distorted and the concept of foregoing on consumption lost. This may be a function of our technological society as we have instant messages, email, cell phones, and can get pretty much anything at the drop of a hat. However, somewhere, somehow the fear of debt and and the servitude that goes with it have been lost. Perhaps it arises due to the chronological distance between today and the last set of hard times or is just a product of sophisticated marketing campaigns.

In any case, consumerism as it exists today equals complacency and we all know what happens when complacency enters the mindset. Americans as a group had better take a break from MasterCard and take a look at their balance sheets or they will soon find out that complacency is accompanied by a hefty bill.

Big Screen TV...$2,000
Ford Expedition...$35,000
Granite Countertops....$3,000

...the satisfaction of going to sleep debt-free...PRICELESS.

By Andy Sutton
http://www.my2centsonline.com

Andy Sutton holds a MBA with Honors in Economics from Moravian College and is a member of Omicron Delta Epsilon International Honor Society in Economics. He currently provides financial planning services to a growing book of clients using a conservative approach aimed at accumulating high quality, income producing assets while providing protection against a falling dollar.


© 2005-2012 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




Commenting Issue - If on submitting you are returned to the main Index Page (50% chance) then your comment has not been accepted, Follow below steps for 95% chance of comment being accepted.

  1. Click your browser Back button (from main index page).
  2. COPY your comment text from Comment box (i.e. copy to clipboard).
  3. Press PAGE Refresh - You should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation"
  4. Paste your comment back into the comment text box.
  5. Click Submit - If everything goes okay you will remain on the article page with the message "Your comment was held for moderation and will be reviewed shortly".
  6. If instead you are again returned to the main index page then repeat 1-5, alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book