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The New Shopping Order

Keith Farnish | 19.04.2007 22:02 | Analysis | Ecology | Globalisation | World

Do we really care about our shopping habits, or have we just become enveloped in a commercial fantasy that won't let us go? This article offers a way out of our biggest addiction.

“Buy a lot of stuff, you're a good citizen. But if you don't buy a lot of stuff, if you don't, what are you then, I ask you?” (Jeffrey Goines, Twelve Monkeys, 1995)


This article starts with a simple tale about shopping. It is set in the UK, but could be set anywhere where manufactured goods are heavily used. The situations and dilemmas are common enough, but in a nation like the UK where, on average, every single person spends £2400 per year on consumer items (electrical goods, clothing, books, furniture, etc.), the outcomes may be a bit different from what you might expect…

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Leon kicks the back of his old Nike training shoes against the upturned storage box he is sitting on. The repetitive “thump” of rubber against the green plastic, temporarily distracts him from the rush of brands and logos he picks out as they move past his view. The classroom is a rush of noise, banging and shouting with end-of-term excitement, but Leon is sullen, envious of the shiny black swooshes and sharp, clean double banded Reebok announcements that the shoes of his classmates make in front of him. 12 months is, like, well old. He needs new trainers.

Amy is frustrated. An excellent job in central London with a decent salary, promotion due in 6 months, a social life to die for, and no way she can tell all her MySpace friends her most intimate but public thoughts. A slave to technology, and a slave to her own technophobia, now her PC won’t start; it won’t even beep, for goodness sake! Just a dull hum and a yawning blankness accusingly berating her. It’s just a PC, it’s not as though she does any work on it, but her online world is an escape that she needs oh so often. To hell with it! She opens the Evening Standard she picked up from the railway seat, still warm and crumpled from the last evening suit that left the carriage, and sees the promise of a faster, brighter online world for £499 + VAT. Tomorrow she hits PC World and her life will be back with her.

Gary stands on the dull stone patio looking into a miniature jungle of grass, yarrow, buttercup and dandelion. It’s been 2 weeks since he went on holiday, and while Jennifer unpacks the suitcases, he wonders why he didn’t take the chance on his day off before the holiday to drive over to B&Q and buy the lawnmower that the bugs and slugs fear, and which means that his domestic failings aren’t the talk of the next barbecue. Just a short drive, only 5 miles or so, and there is a Flymo that would cut through the mess in no time. In thought he almost misses the call of his elderly neighbour. Turning to his left he sees a plug and a short length of orange cable flapping mischievously just above the fence, and hears an offer he might have had to say no had he gone to B&Q a couple of weeks earlier. Yes, he does want Anne’s old lawnmower, now she pays the mobile gardener to come and do the work her old back can’t. And he stops for a minute and wonders too whether the local DVD rental shop still has that pre-owned copy of Animal Crossing that Jack wants for his birthday; just time to pop up to town before Jennifer gets him to put on a dark load of washing.

Gordon curses the advertisement that keeps coming up on his screen every time one programme ends and the next begins. Switch To Digital, Get Freeview. He knows all too well that in October there will be no choice and his old analogue TV signal will be as useless as the rolls of “emergency” Kodak film lying in the back room drawer, just in case everything goes wrong and he needs something to record life after technology, he muses. Ah well, nothing ventured, he always wanted BBC Four anyway; a ravenous documentary watcher with a hunger for good information, and no slouch in picking up new technology. But Gordon is sick of seeing Made In China on everything. We used to make things here, didn’t we? So he is putting his coat on and seeing the man at Comet, and demanding to see something at least made less than 5000 miles away, and lo, and behold, something is. That evening, snuggled in front of the TV, watching The World, Gordon smiles at the Freeview box he discovered, amongst all the £19.99 sets, that was made in the UK, and not shipped half way round the world. His discovery.

The glaring lights and dashing colours are washing over Amy. Here and there boxes are carried by, covered with “Special Offer” and “256MB free”, and a Vista that leads to a horizon of infinite possibilities. But all Amy cares about is the Customer Service sign behind her. When she got home last night her poor PC didn’t work, but still had a lovely blue glow, and she couldn’t just throw it away. The cloud of dust blown out of the inside of her machine by the lady in the blue shirt, and the click as something once again found its home was poetry. £50 and a working PC. Now she just needs to find a black cab to the station, and then home to her friends again.

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A positive tale of good decisions, or an absurd fantasy that would never happen today? I suppose it depends on your point of view. In another, parallel story, the decisions taken could all so easily have slipped into the easy option of buying something new and ignoring the immense piles of toxic and dangerous waste building up all over the world, the incessant energy demands involved in manufacturing goods and transporting the raw materials and finished products to their destination, and not forgetting the energy consumed in selling and purchasing these same goods. It seems that most of us are caught in the eddying, tightening spirals that increase not only the speed at which goods are replaced, but also the absurdly large range of goods that we consider necessary for modern fulfilment.

Is this our fault? Partly, yes. There are often suggestions of a cynical ploy by cartels of manufacturers to ensure that goods break down or become outdated before they should - "planned obsolescence" - and while this may not necessarily be the case, there is plenty of motivation for manufacturers not to care about durability any more. Software changes demand hardware upgrades, users of gadgets (or more likely, marketers of gadgets) press designers for more features, trends in the market driven by changing lifestyles require new items with new specifications, and even something so superficial as fashion can make an entire brand obsolete overnight. Planned obsolescence, whether it exists or not, is only an inconvenience to those who actually want their stuff to last for years. The underlying reduction in build quality caused by cheap components, poor workmanship and bad design doesn't really matter so long as we are happy to replace items at breakneck speed.

So what hope is there for breaking out of these spirals that dictate our behaviour?

If we go back to that original figure of £2400 for every single person in the UK, which is about £144 billion a year on non-food items (not including vehicles) then that is an awful lot of consumer behaviour to change. By comparison, the total value of goods sold on eBay worldwide in 2006 was about $50 billion. The UK accounts for about 10% of the total global eBay market which, assuming about 50% of eBay items are pre-owned (I carried out a quick survey), totals about £1.25 billion as of March 2007, or less than 1% of UK non-food retail sales.

According to the Association of Charity Shops 93% of goods sold in UK charity shops are pre-owned, which equates to about £500 million per year, or 0.4% of UK retail sales. Given the pre-eminence of charity shops as outlets for pre-owned good in the UK, it’s not looking good – we don’t seem to be rushing out to buy things second or third hand. But hard figures can be misleading and, as we have seen, there is a lot more to reducing consumption than buying pre-owned goods. What about giving them away? At the time of writing 675,000 people in the UK, and 3.5 million people worldwide were registered with www.freecycle.org. It is, of course, impossible to gauge the quantity of goods that are not bought due to people obtaining them on Freecycle, but the fact that around 2% of the adult population of the UK are registered with Freecycle is certainly a hint of its potential.

But there is a colossal battle to be won, against virtually every commercial interest on Earth, that relies almost entirely on people choosing to buy new and replace existing items that they have at a rate that is currently 5 times that of global population growth.

In short, we need to have a completely new attitude to shopping, where reality and conscience takes precedence over the open mouthed acceptance by the public of new goods, and where the people of Earth are prepared to stop for a moment and think about the effect that every single new item that they purchase is having on this planet.

There needs to be a New Shopping Order. Being part of it is simple : next time you want to buy some new trainers, a new lawnmower, computer, digital decoder, anything at all, ask yourself the following questions, in this order:


1) Do I need to buy this thing at all?

2) Can I repair or refurbish this thing, or have somebody do it for me?

3) Can I buy or obtain this thing, or something similar, pre-owned?

4) Can I buy this thing in a more ethical way?


And what about Leon, who wanted new training shoes so badly? Well, he spoke to his mother, who put his trainers in the washing machine and the next day gave him back a pair that looked just like new.



(Originally published at :  http://earth-blog.bravejournal.com/entry/21397)

Keith Farnish
- Homepage: http://www.theearthblog.org

Comments

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Free Shops

22.04.2007 13:01

In the UK goods are skipped if they can't be sold. Slightly damaged goods are landfilled. Old furniture is dumped in the countryside. And there is no need for that.

In Leiden, and I think in many other Dutch towns, there is a Free Shop. Everything in it is second-hand or damaged goods, and completely free. Someone opens it in the morning, and closes it at night but apart from that, people and goods just come and go. It would be the equivalent of our charity shops but much better. For a start, the word charity itself is demeaning. I had a job at the time so would never have went to a charity store. I picked up some stuff from the Free Shop though and returned it and more a few months later. It allows people with stuff they don't need to cheaply and conscientiously dispose of it, it prevents purchasing things that are only needed for a limited time, it prevents slightly damaged shop goods being landfill, and it relieves social inequalities.

Danny