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How long will the 'new frugality' last?

Posted Aug 01 2008, 04:11 AM by Donna Freedman
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Gas is expensive and food is going higher and higher. I'm not talking about today -- I'm flashing back to my teenage years. Times were tight between 1974 and 1976, when I ran the household for my father and younger brother. I remember how quickly the grocery money evaporated even though I made all our meals, desserts and snacks from scratch. Gasoline was not only costly but rationed during what was widely referred to as the "energy crisis."

People combined errands and stayed home a lot more. They cut back on nonessential foodstuffs, did without entertainment and new clothes, and generally tried to make their dollars go further. But this austerity didn't last. The age of conspicuous consumption cranked up in the 1980s, and cars seemed to get bigger each year. More than a few times I've said to myself, or to others, "Have we learned nothing from the '70s?"

Nope, we hadn't. The crisis was over. We had plenty of gas once more.

But now fuel is pricey again and food costs are getting scary. Suddenly people are combining errands, cutting back on nonessential foodstuffs, doing without entertainment and generally trying to make their dollars go further.

As Mark Twain put it, history doesn't repeat itself but it does rhyme.

Second verse, same as the first
The Associated Press recently ran an article titled, "Consumers make changes -- but will they last?" It reported what most of us already know: People are having to spend more these days on the absolute essentials. It's not surprising that sales of store-brand products have gone up 9.1% in the past year.

Some folks are really hurting. They can't feed and clothe their kids properly. They're going without even the most basic health care. They're losing vehicles, or homes, because they can't pay the freight. They're existing on the margins.

Others are keeping the books balanced, but only just. If gas or food keep going up they'll have to find the money; how, they're not sure. They worry about the future.

And some are merely inconvenienced. They're cutting back -- vacations nixed in favor of "staycations," fewer shopping trips, less organic food -- but they're nowhere close to starving. They're just grumpy.

For all three groups, having to spend more for groceries and gasoline has meant less money for clothes, home improvement and entertainment. Businesses are feeling the pinch and, the article notes, "are trying to figure out which habits shoppers will keep and which they will drop when the economy recovers." Will consumers keep going to thrift stores and eating at places that offer buy-one-get-one coupons?  

My sources say "no." I'm betting that a whole bunch of people will go right back to their spendy ways, just as they did after the 1970s energy crisis. We didn't learn a thing back then, and I'm betting we won't learn this time, either.

Or consider a more recent example: According to the AP article, the recession of the early 1990s made affluent shoppers check out cheaper alternatives. I remember reading about the smart set slumming at discount and dollar stores. Those were also the days when Amy Dacyczyn couldn't crank out her "Tightwad Gazette" newsletter fast enough.

But this new frugality didn't last. When times got better, dollars bled from wallets once more. We learned nothing that time, either.

A little bit louder and a little bit worse
Maybe it will be different this time. Maybe people who have learned the joys of being debt-free will decide to stay that way. On a Smart Spending message board thread, a reader posting as "ss18612" notes that thanks to frugality she no longer dreads the arrival of the daily mail: "Bills are paid the day they arrive and an unexpected expense is not a major problem. It takes planning, perseverance and sacrifice, but it's oh so worth it!"

I don't think this is a majority attitude. Americans have short memories and long shopping lists. As soon as things improve even a little, I bet the malls will be crowded once more.

And if things don't improve fast enough? There's always credit, which even people with questionable financial histories can get (albeit at usurious rates). Why should we have to cut back on Christmas shopping, or live without game systems and big-screen televisions just because times are tough?

If I sound pessimistic, it's because I am. I'm tired of the sound of history continuing to rhyme.

Comments

 

I couldn't agree with you more; I lived thru the gas rationing of the '70s, but greed once again kicked in and the "Big 3" decided to bamboozle us with the idea that everyone needed an SUV (the only sport those drivers engage in us road rage) and I guess you can't after all fix stupid.

For a lot of people, being frugal is fun for a while.  That is, until the novelty wears off!:P  Even though the early years of my marraige were very lean, I'm grateful for them.  They taught me to contrive and to make dinner out of just a few essentials.  They also taught me to put things back if they were out of my budget and to do free things for fun.  It's harder for people who used to have a lot more money to scale back their affluent lifestyle.  If you started out poor...You already know how to make due with less.

We should keep in mind the distinction between frugality and poverty.  Frugality is voluntary, poverty is not.  People are not suddenly becoming frugal, they are experiencing varying levels of poverty.  No one enjoys poverty.  Many of us enjoy living frugally and simply.  The problem with the frugality folks is they all take the moral high ground.   They are often reverse elitists.

Also, if everyone lives like this is a third world country, it will become a third world country.  The country thrives on consumer spending.  China and India are thriving because their citizens can afford food processors and cars.  The sectors of our economy that are thriving are selling stuff to China and India.

Isn't it interesting?

Most people won't live within their means because they don't have to. The rampant credit card abuse in this country allows just about anyone to live beyond their means. Credit card use and the perceived need to have a "lifestyle" are an 80's concept that just won't die. Being frugal is viewed as being so old fashioned, but didn't everyone seem happier in the old days. Where is the happiness now?  

It won't change because of a sense of entitlement that people have, and it starts younger and younger as time goes on.  

Despite my father making an excellent living growing up, my mother never wasted a dime running the household.  And this was during an economic boom, so it was a choice. Because of their combined financial sense, they are now retired, and will never want for anything.  (And before everyone reminds me that not everyone makes a great living, I know.  I don't either, but a great income means nothing if you blow it all on unnecessary stuff.)  I hope I can pass the same lessons on to my son and daughter.

Meanwhile, I was talking with a friend of mine whose daughter just turned twelve.  This girl has been getting manicures and pedicures and highlights done since she was eight.  And I mean at a beauty shop, not buying stuff at drugstores to do at home.  The charge for these often runs into triple digits, just for an activity that she thought would be something fun for them to do together.  I'm sure it is, and that's cool, but what happens when she starts getting her first job with a salary that might not allow for those kind of frills?  I genuinely hope she can afford whatever she wants, but the majority of the time, it just doesn't happen at first. Most people have to work for this stuff, and the earlier people learn that, the better off they are.  

Otherwise you might grow into the person who was mocking my sister at a financial seminar at her company because she contributes the maximum to her retirement plan and only eats out maybe once a week.  One of the nicer things he said was, "Don't you ever feel deprived?"  A fair question given consumer habits, but since when was eating out once a week considered deprivation?

Don't get me wrong, I'm no angel.  I have my own materials hangups; if I didn't ration my iTunes habits with gift cards every few months, I could really do myself in. I'm not begruding people the right to spend their hard-earned money however they want. And I'm not judging people that want the best for their chilld, that's admirable.  But whatever happened to a treat only once in awhile, or presents for high school graduation instead of anytime Junior brings home anything over a B-minus?

I don't care whether this is considered frugal or not but I have always been one to conserve my trips starting when I began to drive. I just plain don't like running all over the place at anytime. If I need to go somewhere it has to be either near other place(s) I also need to go or on my way to work or to school. I do a full circle when its possible. That just makes sense to me and to do otherwise is just plain silly. The only treat I give myself is my cable internet and that is my sanity working in retail. That is worth anything  I may not get or think I need. Everyone is different in their wants and needs.But I don't feel like I have to justify why I do or don't do anything and neither should anyone else....

My husband and I are in the middle group: just paying the bills, and having enough to buy gas and a few groceries. We are unable to build any savings right now, so funding our entertainment is a luxery we absolutely can't afford. We just bought our first house last August, got married in October, and have rapidly been absorbing the financial shock of our times every day since. In my life before homeownership, I shopped on the weekends. Every weekend! I want to kick that girl right in the pants. And while I too feel that once this economy rebounds, many people will be right back to their overly indulgent ways, I for one, no that this new frugality I've inherited will stick. I can feel the difference in my wants and desires. That's not to say I'm free of the chains of consumerism, who is?? I just know that my priorites have shifted permanently and for the better. Great article, Donna!

I vaguely remember the 70's (born in 72), but because of the nature of my parents business, nothing much changed for us in the 80's. I can remember how snotty kids were when we wore old clothes, or our clothes were "so last year!" I can remember a man buying his daughter a brand new convertible for school, then filing bankruptcy a few years later. Now, when things are bad again, my parents are in a better financial position than most other people their age in this area. Their home is paid for, they NEVER ran up credit cards, although they have great credit and could have. I'm glad I was raised with less. It made me appreciate what I have, and when the economy goes south the way it is now, we are better prepared for it.

Forget "When Animals Attack"..."When Need Meets Greed" might be a scarier reality show...:)

How long will it last?  It's like weight loss: if you crash diet, it can't be maintained.  You'll start to feel deprived, then splurge.  If you make it a lifestyle change, then you'll stick to it.

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