
By Mike  Cassidy – Mercury News
Posted: 05/21/2009
I took a  field trip to Johnny Crowell's home-furnishing consignment empire recently to  get a read on the level of pain being inflicted by the continuing economic  downturn.
I  expected to find stories of heartbreak and desperation when I walked into the 
The  consignment business, after all, is about people bringing in their used  furnishings and waiting for them to sell, at which point they split the  proceeds with the store. And people today are in the market for proceeds. But  what I got at the cavernous showroom of castoffs was a lesson in the subtlety  of economic upheaval. Like a butterfly batting its wings in 
On my  afternoon visit, the 
"Our  sales are up, which is interesting," says Crowell, who with three partners  owns 15 stores in 
In fact,  the 
But  there was another element in the crowd, explains Linda Hall, the Mountain View  store manager, an element for which she makes sure to stock some modest,  low-priced items, like small framed prints for $19. "Sometimes people want  to buy something just to make themselves feel good,'' Hall says.
No, it's not exactly a study by the Council of Economic Advisers, and Hall isn't claiming it is. But the comment got me thinking about the lasting effects of the Big Recession. As the misery drags on, it's become fashionable to debate whether the hard times will be followed by lasting change in our behavior as consumers.
Some say  the misery will spawn another Depression generation — we'll be transformed into  a crowd that rolls scraps of twine into little balls and never passes a penny  on the sidewalk without stooping to pick it up.
I'm not  convinced. I think the marketing and media machine assembled to sell us  everything from a faster way to eat to a better way to watch TV is too powerful  for us to resist. We have become consuming beasts. This frugal life — this life  of leftovers, last season's fashions and mall-less weekends — feels unnatural  and unfair.
When the  economy comes back, we'll come right back with it: shopping, spending,  consuming. No question our expectations have been downsized for now. We've been  reined in by our diminished retirement accounts, stock portfolios, home values  and incomes. We are saving more than we've saved in a long time. But as we are  building up our bank accounts, we are also building up demand. Demand for  stuff.
Get  this: Consumer spending was up in the first quarter of the year. Yes, the  economy is terrible and the future uncertain, but we're adjusting. Financial  calamity, it seems, is the new normal, so let's go out and buy something.
Crowell,  who started opening consignment stores 15 years ago, says he senses an upswing  in consumerism. As the economy went into free fall, he explains, fewer and  fewer private individuals brought him old items to sell. People were just  hanging on to whatever furniture they had rather than replacing it with  something new and exciting. An unprecedented share of his inventory was coming  from businesses: furniture factories with excess inventory and furniture stores  that were going out of business.
Now, he  says, private parties are calling again, wanting to unload old stuff so they  can make way for new stuff they want to buy.
"That's  some leading indicator,'' Crowell says. "There is something of a market  change occurring.''
The  question now is: Does that mean good times are coming back? Or does the change  simply mean that sometimes people want to buy something just to make themselves  feel good?
Source: http://www.siliconvalley.com/opinion/ci_12420679
 
 

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