Let’s get down to some real ‘kitchen table economics’ here: If you work for one of the financial/banking giants, it’s possible you might lose your job in the coming days or months. If you work for a company that borrows money to expand, operate or just plain keep going…it’s possible you might lose your job in the coming days or months. If you work for a governmental entity(state or municipal)…ditto. You get the idea. A lot of us are going to start feeling even more uncomfortable and insecure very soon, if we haven’t already done so. How to survive? For all the comparisons to The Great Depression, in my estimation, this is a whole new ballgame. Why? First and foremost: in 1929, people in the United States were not that far removed from subsistence living. Even people who lived in the largest urban areas still were doing many things for themselves, simply because the consumer economy behemoth did not exist the way it does today. The distance between farmers and other producers and consumers was not that far — consumers in New York City, for example, were buying their farm products from New Jersey and the counties in New York State within a couple of hours travel. No one was getting strawberries in January from California or Florida – that … did…not…exist. The whole economy of just going to a store and buying whatever you wanted/needed was much smaller than it is today; people many times had to make do, make over, or make their own. My great aunties worked in the garment trade; one of them did put herself through secretarial school and graduated from the sewing machine to a typewriter at The American Tobacco Company. A real step up. Her sister sewed for a fancy ladies’ lingerie manufacturer her whole life. At home, they made their own clothing, were thrifty, and only indulged themselves on occasion. In the Depression, when their parents had to move out to Coney Island(because it was a lot cheaper than the Bronx), they all moved in together in a fifth floor walk up. They pulled together and reduced the entire family’s overhead. And they survived. The big book of the period was "Five Acres and Independence"(you can still get it from Amazon), aimed at people moving out of cities and surviving because they had a bit of land(actually, five acres is quite a chunk of property). How are people going to survive the loss of major family income today — especially if they live someplace where either they don’t have a big yard or if they do, they might live where there are restrictive covenants(lawns of a certain size, planting of xx plants, no vegetable gardens where they can be seen, no hanging clothes on a clothesline outside and so on). In a society where much of people’s image of themselves and their families revolves around financial resources rather than actual ‘do it for ourselves, thrift, etc. " skills, what are the possible outcomes for families who lose a big chunk of their income?
Getting Through The Next….Several Years? |
|
| By: TobyWollin Sunday September 28, 2008 10:47 am | |



7 Comments




Well society will change then won’t it and for the better as far as I’m concerned. Beans and Rice time
TCU- I can see some families struggling just from the standpoint of relationships between parents and children. I’d say in a fairly large percentage of families in the US, the children have been raised to see themselves(and are seen by their parents as)the recipients of the family largess. How are family relationships going to change when a)there is a whole lot less largess to go around and b)instead of kids being able to avoid having relationships and conflicts with the rest of the family by going out with their friends and shopping all the time, they have to find other ways to entertain themselves that don’t involve the spending of money(or the use of credit cards)? I think it’s going to be pretty rough for a while. We’ve all gotten very used, over the past forty to fifty years of being consumers, not producers.
Time to throw some shoes.
I don’t recognize the reference Teddy…shoes?
Could this mean horseshoes?
could be, but I’ve never heard that phrase, but I’m thoroughly confused. But here is the first thing we are doing at our house to deal with possible outcomes: My eldest and her husband live pretty close to us; we sat down(electronically; IM is great for this), discussed groceries, cooking, meal planning and will be getting together once a week to make something like a huge pot of chili, or lasagne, or chicken enchiladas, etc. We figure we will save money; there will be something already made in the freezer that can be pulled out at the last min. and zapped for dinner and we will all go out to dinner a whole lot less. The second thing is: although we’ve done a lot of work on our house in the insulation end of things, we still have one big piece of ductwork that goes through an unheated addition in the basement. We’re going to share labor: we’ll go over to their house and help them insulate their attic and the ductwork and they will come over and help us get the ductwork in the basement insulated.
Here are a couple of other ideas:
If you have family near by, you can share costs – buy in bulk, swap clothing, ride share. If you don’t have family close by(and most of us don’t these days), then it’s time to create another version of family who ARE close by: your neighbors and friends, people you work with. Partner up. It’s time to invite people over for pizza or chili and get down to it – everyone is going to feel some of this pain and no one wants to feel alone. Share information; share ideas on bulk buying; if someone is a member of a local CSA, can you participate too? Your neighborhood can become your little village.
And let’s talk about the whole issue of gardening. Perhaps you live in a situation where you can’t garden. Perhaps it’s time for you and your neighbors to look into a CSA – community supported agriculture. Many times you can cut a really good deal and you will be supporting local small farmers. My husband and I approached a couple of meat producers at our local farmers market and asked if we could cut a deal on a yearly supply of chickens, turkeys, beef and lamb. We were even willing to pay half up front so that they would have money to work with – but they were just happy to know that they’d have guaranteed buyers and sell to us as they process. We asked one of the farmers if he could help us find fruit that we did not have ‘u-pick’ locally for. He made arrangements to get us the fruit(which we then dried and froze)at cost. Another thing to do is come to the farmers market in the last hour — these folks don’t want to have to take this stuff home – except for things like Hubbard Squashes, they can’t hold it over to the next market, so you can cut a deal on that also. Then, you need to be prepared to process the fruit and veggies when you get home. If you are partnering up with your neighbors, get together and split things up, or if you all want to do the same thing(like, make tomato sauce or salsa or whatever), then get together to do that. Check to see if your local Cooperative Extension or other organization has a commercial kitchen that you can use for a fee and get together to do that. No one likes to have to admit they’ve got hard times – but working together, a lot more of us can get through.