Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/08

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Subject: [Leica] OT ! a naked exposure
From: hlritter at mindspring.com (hlritter@mindspring.com)
Date: Sat Jan 8 13:44:17 2005

This is a good point, though there are two ways to look at it. The 
superficial rationalization is that economies of scale and low wages allow 
goods to be sold at prices significantly lower than what "mom-and-pop", or 
non-chain, non-discount stores have to charge. If the function of a retail 
store is to enable consumers to purchase goods, then so what if one-off 
retailers are pushed out of business by big-box stores? The point is to buy 
goods at the most economical price. Why should I pay more for a head of 
lettuce just to help keep a neighborhood grocery in business when I can save 
20% by shopping at Sam's Club? I don't work 50 hours a week in order to have 
enough money to pay inefficient operations more than efficient ones for the 
same goods! The same applies to factory farms vs. family farms: What is my 
interest in paying hard-earned money to help to "preserve a uniquely 
American way of life, reminiscent of a more innocent era, embodying rural 
and earthy family values", yada yada yada. Times change! Societies evolve! 
They said the same thing about the demise of buggy makers and blacksmiths. 
Just get a grip on the facts of history and deal with it!

I have to agree that all of the above is true, and I sympathize with it, but 
there's more to it.

The more nuanced (and at the same time, perhaps paradoxically na??ve) 
realization is that some big-box discounters are not merely a passive 
conduit for goods and that bloodthirsty, take-no-prisoners personnel 
policies ignore the obligations of the successful and powerful in a complex 
symbiotic economy. Centralized chains that move huge amounts of goods can 
contract with the cheapest suppliers (e.g., China Inc., Nike, and all the 
others that make products that sell for huge multiples of the cost of 
materials and labor) for goods that largely replace domestically-produced 
equivalents. They are market-makers for goods, swinging a weight that can 
alter corporate policies (provoking offshore moves, for example) in the 
relentless quest for "shareholder value" (translation: corporate profit), as 
if that entity trumps all other considerations. This is Greg's "vicious 
circle of cheap imports and low-paying jobs".

As for symbiosis and the obligation of the powerful: In a natural society, 
there is an inevitable stratification of talent and ability among 
individuals. If the vigor of an economy and the profitability of business 
result from a broad demand that is an emergent property of an extensively 
differentiated and specialized society in general, and depend on the 
existence of a mutually dependent system of economic and living 
interactions--and they do--then the existence and needs of lower strata must 
be accepted along with the opportunities for consumption and economic 
transaction afforded by the existence of relatively affluent consumers. In 
other words, a natural society that produces the opportunity to profit from 
selling to those who are able also produces those who are less able, and in 
some case unable. You can't have a natural population that consists of 
nothing but highly productive individuals. (This is not only natural and 
inevitable, but good. Society needs everything from ditchdiggers to garbage 
collectors to roofers to electricians to teachers to nurses to doctors to 
scientists--with seekers after public office in there somewhere. Few who are 
innately capable of becoming solid-state physicists end up pushing brooms 
for lack of the right opportunities--though that lack CAN make the 
difference between self-sufficiency and dependency.) Part of the obligation 
of the productive is public support for people of good intention who just 
can't make it. Support should take, ultimately, the affording of the means 
for advancement, but for some people, at some times, welfare support is just 
necessary. The problem with the idea that everyone should be held solely 
responsible for his own course in life, sink or swim, it's up to you and too 
bad if you can't float, is that no one is required to do everything for 
himself. This is not the raw frontier where each person accomplishes every 
task, meets every need, for himself. We are differentiated and specialized. 
This happens only in a diversified population, a society, and an inevitable 
part of any society is the presence of the less able. It is immoral to 
expect to benefit from the spending of the able without acknowledging the 
needs of the less able. In the same sense, the corporate entities that reap 
huge profits from massive sales of cheap goods in low-overhead stores, 
taking advantage, legitimately, of the spending power of society, have an 
obligation to acknowledge the needs of that society beyond consumers' need 
for cheap lettuce. When they contract for foreign goods, pay starvation 
wages, and do the other things that Wal-Mart does to maximize "shareholder 
value", they are failing this obligation. Shareholder value comes about only 
in a differentiated society, in which the needs of society for decent pay 
for everyone are a corporate obligation. All economic power comes from the 
public, and decency is owed back to the public that makes profits 
possible--a decency beyond selling lettuce as cheaply as possible.


It may well be that in a purely laissez-faire capitalism, the interests of 
the owners of the company do trump all other considerations, but my position 
is that we left that kind of society behind after Dickensian times. This 
admittedly socialist-left stance sits in cognitive dissonance with my 
libertarian feelings, and I am still trying to understand what I really 
think. It is an emblem of my naivete that I think there is a solution out 
there somewhere, an acceptable balance of legislation with laissez-faire. 

--howard


-----Original Message-----
From: lug-bounces+hlritter=mindspring.com@leica-users.org 
[mailto:lug-bounces+hlritter=mindspring.com@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of 
GREG LORENZO
Sent: Saturday, January 08, 2005 1:03 PM
To: Leica Users Group
Subject: Re: [Leica] OT ! a naked exposure

Jeffery Smith wrote:

> I think the problem is that, in order to keep rolling back them 
> prices, they have to buy everything from China and hire people who 
> cannot get a job that pays more than minimum wage. Any job that pays 
> minimum wage is likely to have some people who don't exercise good 
> judgement. ;-)
> 
> Jeffery
> 

What is even more horrifying to me is that they steamroll over their 
competition in small cities and towns and are well on thier way to creating 
a national economy that is dependent on a vicious circle of cheap imports 
and low paying jobs. This in turn damns some of their current employees' 
children to diminished opportunities as Wal-mart clerks, McDonalds fry guys 
or strangling chickens for the Colonel.

Regards,

Greg

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