Standee wrote:I couldn't agree more, was in Tesco yesterday and was looking at Cauliflower Cheese and Cottage Pie in their "finest" selection, total cost was a little over £6.
Now, I admit, at the moment I am very "time rich" so I decided to cook it myself instead (and I understand that not everyone has a lot of time to plan or make meals). I bought mince, caluiflower, cheese, milk, potatoe and already had plain flower and beef stock in, I made the same meal (probably better quality/flavour) for about half that price...
Doesn't surprise me at all.
And not those particularly, but there a lot of those sort of products, from a variety of supermarkets, that include loads of additives and crazy ingredients – one of my 'favourites' was pectin in a "finest" Tesco Lancashire hot pot.
Standee wrote:I dislike many things about supermarkets, the fact that everything seems to have way too much packaging, the fact you can't seem to buy small quantities of anything unless it's loose fruit/veg (on rare occasions you can buy stuff from the "specialist" counters in singles or twos). But I don't blame the supermarkets, they are responding to demand (it wasn't selling they wouldn't give it shelf space)...
There's an extent to which they create the demand, though. Again, the Blythman book is good on this sort of stuff. But when you get into the realms of stores employing psychologists to design stores and displays etc, you're into something that goes beyond offering a choice and then just responding to what the customers buy.
It's slightly off topi (ie away from grocery retail), but I had a few hours in Manchester one Sunday morning a year or so ago, and went for a nostalgic wander around the Arndale. Well, not so much nostalgia, since it had been rebuilt. But the thing that struck me most forcefully – perhaps because I just don't go to such shopping centres except in very rare circumstances – was the music.
Apart from the Waterstones and the Games Workshop, every retail outlet had pounding music blasting out of the doors. Even the Disney shop had music pounding out – okay, rather Disneyfied, but still with a very strong rhythm/bass line. And it struck me to wonder why this is such a universal. Does a strong bass raise the heartbeat and increase probability of a spend? I don't claim to know the answer, but why would everywhere, from clothing to high-end electronics to toys use the same approach?
I don't think that the relationship between such shops/stores and the customer is anywhere near as evenly balanced as some people seem to think it is.
Standee wrote:People have very wistful memories of how good it used to be "back in the day", but they forget a few key things, the main one being that, in most households, Mum didn't work, or if she did, she worked part time, so a two hour trek to the village for shopping every couple of days was no big problem, shops openend at 8 and closed at 5, you had your milk delivered every day (or every other day), the "veg van" came to you once a week (if you were somewhere on the round), that just isn't the society we live in anymore...
Things have certainly changed – and not all for the worst. But it's still possible to shop, in essence, just once a week. Unless you really have masses of space in the freezer and can shop once a month and freeze everything, most people will still have to do a weekly shop. I manage that – without a car – and there's usually not much that I need to pick up (if at all) between weekends. If I'm off work, I might do it differently, but that's the norm.
And as I said, there are young businesses that are opening differently to cater for people who work, being able to pick up something on the way home from work – very much as you'll see in somewhere like Paris.
Just to reiterate, there is a place for supermarkets (as that interview with the butcher illustrates, they can co-exist with independents): the issue is the dominance of the market and the negative impact it has on local communities and independent businesses.
Standee wrote:... or should I just call it "consumerism", and that wasn't created by anyone but those who subscribe to the idealogy ..."
I'd not disagree with a lot of what you say there. However, it's difficult to conclude that, if not created from scratch, then it was certainly boosted (for want of a better phrase). Decisions were taken to change the nature of the national economy, and increasing retail was a major part of that. Disposable income didn't massively increase at the same time, so specific decisions were made to change the culture to include cheap credit. Similarly, with housing, there were very specific political decisions taken to move people into home ownership rather than rent and, most particularly, away from council housing. Even decisions such as scrapping the Sunday trading laws – on the publicised grounds that it was stuopid that you could buy porn on a Sunday but not a
Bible. In retrospect, it can be seen that that was a massive boost to big retail.