Source: charleshughsmith.blogspot.com
The decay in quality reveals that the collapse of the neoliberal-hyper-financialization-hyper-globalization model has already occurred.
I’ve often addressed the dismaying decline of quality over the past 30+ years, for example, The “Crapification” of the U.S. Economy Is Now Complete (February 9, 2022).
I have attributed this to:
1) hyper-globalization, which pushes manufacturers to buy the cheapest components to lower costs. The failure of any one poorly made component renders the entire device useless junk which is dumped in the landfill.
2) Planned obsolescence as the corporate strategy to boost profits in an economy where everyone already has everything. By reducing the quality, product failure is accelerated, and the hapless consumer is forced to replace a device every few years that 30 years ago would have provided decades of trouble-free service.
3) Consumers have been trained to consume, no matter how poor the quality. Tossing stuff in the landfill is wonderful because this gives us another excuse to go shopping.
4) Since global production and distribution is dominated by rapacious cartels and quasi-monopolies, they don’t care about the terminal decay of the quality of their product/service. They know we’re going to buy their low-quality rubbish anyway because we have no choice, and they know the quality of “competing” (hahaha) products is equally abysmal.
Longtime correspondent Bart D., who coined the term Landfill Economy, pointed out a fifth source of decaying quality: resource depletion. It’s not just hyper-globalization / corporate profiteering driven cost reductions at the expense of durability; it’s also the increasing cost and difficulty of obtaining quality materials and components at any price.
Here are Bart’s comments on “stainless steel”:
“I found, what was for me, the most profound evidence of the ascendancy of the Fraud Economy that underpins the Landfill Economy.
I found it in the term and substance ‘stainless steel.’
I own some old and by the standards of the day in the 1970’s ‘cheap’ stainless steel knives and cutlery. I use a few of these pieces as garden tools. They lay around in the dirt and weather 24-7 and 365 days a year. They are used for purposes never intended by their manufacturers, uses that they would classify as abuse. And I can pick these items out of the dirt, rinse them under a tap and they come up looking like new. They are shiny, silver and have no sign of rust.
And I also own some ‘quality’ stainless steel items that were manufactured in the last 5 years in China. They were not priced in the ‘Cheap and Nasty’ bracket.
These items do nothing more than live in a kitchen or out under the pergola and get wet with clean water.
With Plain water.
And they rust.
Prolifically.
So it seems that since the 1970s, we have managed to figure out how to make Fraud Stainless at a price point above actual stainless (inflation adjusted).
I have come to realise that we are now a VERY long way past ‘Peak Quality’ and Peak quality of life. And we seem to accept this degradation as normal.
We are now living in a comprehensive illusion of what is quality. I’m starting to wonder if there are any products being produced today that are genuinely superior to those produced 30+ years ago.
Advertising tells us that products are ‘Premium,’ but 40 years ago products with similar or superior specifications were produced as ‘cheap.’ Todays standard grade products would be regarded as Defective in the economy of pre-1990s.
Why is this happening? Almost certainly it’s a product of resource depletion and substitution of superior and fit-for-purpose materials with inferior and faulty materials.
I have seen this also in copper pipe and road bitumen. The pre-90s versions of these products were durable and fit for purpose … whatever watered down substitutes we use now are defective grade products that degrade quickly even under normal working conditions.
I wonder how far quality can degrade before our economic model fails?
Maybe we’re just arriving at the point of failure now?”
Thank you, Bart, for illuminating how stainless steel is now stainless steal: an ersatz simulation that is pure fraud and theft. Claiming that a product that corrodes within months is actually “stainless steel” is fraud, and given that consumers are paying premium prices for this fraudulent product, it is also blatant theft: the consumer is paying a premium price for a product which is known by its manufacturer and distributor to be defective / not the high-quality material that was promised….