Kunstler:
"What Will Emerge From The Current Disorder?"
7
January, 2019
A Farewell to "Bargain Shopping"
“May God save the country for it is evident the people will not.”
- Millard Fillmore, 13th POTUS, born this day, 1800
France
has its Yellow Vests. Here in USA, we
have a few poor shlubs hoisting the 'Going Out of Business' signs on
the highway in front of the K-Mart.
The store in my little flyover town in upstate New York announced
that it would shutter in March, and the sign-hoisting shlubs appeared
out on Route 29 the first Saturday in January, an apt kick-off to a
nervous new year. K-Mart’s parent company, Sears, is moving into
liquidation, meaning anything that’s not nailed down must be
converted into cash to pay off its creditors.
The
store’s closing is viewed as both an injury and an insult to the
town. There just isn’t anywhere else to buy a long list of ordinary
goods, from dish-towels to tennis balls without a 17-mile journey
west, which means an hour behind the wheel coming-and-going, plus
whatever time you spend picking stuff up inside. And, of course, many
people in town feel that this is just another way of Wall Street
saying “…you deplorable, pathetic, tapped-out, drug-addled,
tattoo-bedizened yokels are not worthy of a K-Mart….”
The
K-Mart occupied the better part of a small strip mall at the edge of
town, which also boasts a Dollar Store, which appears to sell stuff
that fell off a truck. There’s another, newer strip mall beyond it
with a supermarket, a drug store, and a Tractor Supply outlet that
probably stole a lot of K-Mart’s business after opening a few years
ago. There’s
much speculation about what’ll go into Kmart’s soon-to-be vacant
space, about 80,000 square feet of crappy tilt-up construction not
far from the end of its design life, with a flat roof that has
groaned under heavy snow loads for four decades. Nobody
I talked to has a clue.
Probably
not Neiman Marcus, for starters. I’m thinking: maybe an evangelical
roller rink. It’s too big for a wig shop, or a motorcycle thug-wear
boutique, the usual bottom-feeders in the declension of commercial
collapse. More
likely, nothing will replace it. The
national chain retail model has fallen apart, along with new car
sales. Something
is up in this foundering land, despite all the heraldic trumpet
blasts on cable news about the “booming economy.”
What’s
up is the international implosion of the bad debt, and the fading
illusion that it doesn’t matter. It
has any number of ways to express itself, from store closings, to
dissolving pensions, to stock market instability, to divorce,
homelessness, and war. It’s what you get from a hyper-financialized
economy that doesn’t really produce wealth but only steals it from
somewhere else. It’s not the fault of “capitalism,” which, in
theory just stands for the management of a society’s savings.
America doesn’t save, it borrows. Zero
interest rates made savings a mug’s game, and zero interest rates
were necessary to extend the borrowing far beyond the credible
boundaries of repayment. Debt isn’t capital, it just pretends to be
for a period of time. Wall
Street made its trillions off the time-value of that pretense and now
time is up.
Even
in the hardship economy we’re sailing into, people will need to buy
and sell things and it is very hard to see how that fundamental
process of exchange might be reorganized going forward. Back
in the 1990s I attended many a town meeting (in many towns) where
chain stores applied for permits to set-up operations. It was often
contentious. There was always a contingent of locals — organized by
the chains themselves — waving placards that said “We Want
Bargain Shopping.” And there were the short-sighted town officials
drooling over the real estate tax “ratables” that chain stores
represented. Their adversaries feared that their locally-owned Main
Street businesses would be killed, and that was exactly what
happened, in very short order. You could see it coming from a
thousand miles away. Now the Big Boxes are going down. Boo Hoo….
What
will emerge out of the current disorder? Perhaps
Generations X-Y-and-Z will recognize an opportunity to go into
business — as an alternative to purchasing a degree in gender
studies for $200,000 (at 6 percent interest). There will be lots of
opportunities, even in a world with generally less shopping. But
it may require a deeper collapse to sweep away the impediments, both
practical and mental, before that awareness turns to action.
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