How to Make (Insert Name of Your Country Here) Great Again
My local butcher, from his facebook page
The world I want to live in has markets instead of supermarkets, and little local stores and cafes where you can buy everything you need within walking distance of your house. I want to buy beautiful and interesting things made by artists and crafters. I want to be able to stop by and see the people building my furniture and making my bread. I want to have relationships with the people who make my food, and chat with the old ladies of the neighbourhood in the post office and meet friends at the greengrocers.
I am blessed to live in a neighbourhood where all these things are possible. I can and do shop locally and by the choices that I make about where to spend my dollars on a weekly basis, I am aiming to make my country great again, a place where neighbourhoods provide jobs that are also meaningful work and we all have safe, liveable communities.
I would like to be able to say that I never venture into the giant, ugly dens of iniquity that house the mega corporations of death, destruction and despair, but that would be a rank lie. Damn, those supermarkets are convenient! They stock everything under one enormous and extremely ugly roof. It's cheap. It's there. But it is evil incarnate. They look so innocuous. They will sell you wholesome things that you need like apples and bread and socks. But don't be fooled. They exist to make enormous profits for their owners and shareholders. That is their only mandate. And if you live in Australia it is very difficult indeed to avoid spending your dollars at one of the two major supermarkets, Coles and Woolworths, or at one of their many subsidiaries - Target, Kmart, Myer, Big W, Bunnings, Dan Murphy's, Liquorland, Officeworks. In fact, there would be many Australians who rarely shop anywhere but at one of these stores.
So why is this a problem? Again, these major publicly listed companies exist to make a profit. They are not investing in local products, they are hunting out the cheapest products, and driving down prices at the farm gate to win more market share with cheaper prices for their customers. Farmers are being forced off the land because there comes a point where you can't produce an apple or a celery stick any cheaper.
There are numerous stories of nefarious deals when one of the big chains arrives in town - local hardware stores forced out of business when Bunnings signs exclusive agreements to prevent suppliers selling to the locals. "Brand bombing" when more big chain retail stores are opened than can be sustained by the local population - once the local opposition has closed its doors, the big retailer closes all but one of its stores as well, and that is the end of any alternative shopping experience in town..
And yes, there should be some serious government regulation to prevent this, but honestly, we have done it to ourselves. We have let Coles and Woolworths take over our country and turn it into a giant, dreary suburb where everything is the same. Where is the joy and interest of small family businesses? Where is the fun of tiny quirky shops with interesting jobs for our teenagers? Where are the fair prices that will keep farmers on the land? It's up to us to keep our local shops open and our farmers' markets running. An enormous diversity of small business gives millions of people a chance to live their own dream and make a dignified living with meaningful work. That is a really good place to start to make any country a great place to live..
So this is my challenge to myself. Less convenience, more adventure, colour, interest and good conversation in my local shops. Which means I need to pop out now to walk the dog and buy some bacon before the butcher's shop shuts..
Comments
Hazel, doesn't it make you want to cry? Hopefully there is a butcher, a baker and a greengrocer somewhere local for you! In Tas we still have an independent grocery chain that I patronize for things like toilet paper. I really hope it can hold on in face of the opposition..
My first little flat when I left home was opposite a Foodland in Seacliff in Adelaide. I shopped there nearly every day:) And the great thing about the locals - somehow they often have cheaper prices on some items than the big chains. If I only ever shopped the sales or the markdowns of meat and bread in my local, independent supermarket (IGA here in Tas) it would actually be cheaper than Coles or Woolies..
Still Woolies and other big companies do employ lots of people. And many super funds invest so our future depends on their success.
We could do better. As usual you inspire and challenge me, Jo.
Beautifully written and I do believe that those two giants get 70 cents in every retail dollar in their collective markets. It is a bit scary really and the new German opposition which its adherents seem mildly and creepily "cult like" to me is a limited partnership and from some anecdotal accounts in the media it apparently pays no taxes in Australia on its income. No wonder it is cheap. But fear not, I read recently its even cheaper opposition is considering setting up down under. I shop at the small independents and also the mildly awesome Queen Victoria Market which is sadly in the process of being messed around with. But I feel I must out myself here as I love Bunnings. There you go, I have said it and now feel slightly sullied. From my earlier experience the older hardware stores were not particularly easy to deal with for me as a guy, let alone for females, and I have had to suffer through many humiliating experiences way back in the day. Of course, I also pick up things from the local hardware store nowadays, and they are much better these days, but the business pain it took for them to get to that point...
Thank you for writing this. I have experienced a massive world and also a much smaller local world, and I can tell you that life in the smaller local world wins out every time.
Cheers
Chris
I have hardly any super, and am trying to work out where to put some spare money, because most super funds invest in all sorts of unethical ventures. There must be a solution..
Chris, another thing that makes me spit is mega corporations that don't pay tax in the countries in which they operate. Death to the corporation!
And the terrible thing about my town is that there is NO independent hardware store left. There are 2 Bunnings (Coles) and the rest have been bought out by Wesfarmers (Woolworths). Sigh. The nearest indepenent hardware shop is about half an hour's drive up the river.
I agree - I like my self and my life when I am living in my local world..
Miss Maudy, exactly! Local business owners win too when they know you and your kids, and know that they are likely hiring a responsible young man with sensible parents. They like that security as much as you like knowing your kid has a job with someone who will keep an eye on them, and not exploit them.
German Establishment - love it! Hasn't made its way to Tas yet.
Our local supermarket also has a few good local items stocked, including a local free range egg farms eggs. And they are truly free range as I've seen the green grass with hens upon it from having driven past.
We also have a local hardware store which is awesome, and the funniest flirt of a butcher too! A visit there means we leave with a heart full of laughter and flattery and a bag full of locally raised meat. He grows some of his own meat or buys from local farmers, i believe, occasionally sourcing for further afield - about 30kms (and he made it sound like it was a real burden to go so far afield too!) Sadly no greengrocers in town but we have 2 markets each month - a makers market with fruit and vegs sold and then the farmers market the week after. I wish the farmers market was weekly or even twice a week. Now THAT would be a perfect world.