Today we
were lucky enough to get our hands on some fresh English asparagus, late this
year, but as welcome as ever. The issue
now is how big a helping? Another one is
that the price is going up steadily, year by year, and more than
inflation. So do we keep up our
consumption in parallel with past years or do we economise?
An
alternative is that rather than buying local produce to seek out the less
costly alternatives flown in for very distant parts as part of bulk cargo and
then distributed through depots where it is washed and packaged. However, it is not as good and moreover some
comes from soils becoming degraded year by year.
The local
produce is from suppliers who operate much closer to the margin and who are
vulnerable to any significant adverse variation in their financial
situation. They are not the sort of
people who can find credit easily to tide them over.
The
computer driven centralised financial management systems used by banks and
others are not geared to this kind of operation and are less favourably looked
at because the returns and margins demanded by them are often unaffordable by
the small independent supplier.
Locally, we
now seem to be becoming close to a situation where the number of local and
regional suppliers and their network depends on a certain kind of customer with
either the time or the resources or the will to make the effort to engage with
this kind of retail activity.
For the big
supermarket chains around people like us are of little account because we are a
minority, variable, possibly ageing and one only just worth while providing
stock for. The evidence for this is on
the shelves. You have to hunt around for
the specialist produce and the choice is limited.
At present
we cannot be certain what the overall financial situation and its impact will
be in the short term. It is difficult to
believe all the spin and chatter about how this or that might grow or this or
that monetary wheeze will bring back prosperity. What is happening at the margins suggests
otherwise.
Looking
back over decades it seems to be that the reality is that people in the
middling and middle to low groups, a very large proportion of the population
are facing shrinking real incomes, the inability to save, scant returns on any
saving and taxation take that is creeping up in effect and down the income
scales.
In terms of
employment while there may be more people now in jobs, they are not the same as
jobs in the past. Also the recent
employment legislation and the rest means that for any small operator it is
madness to offer regular employment in the terms of former decades. The larger employers now work on a different
basis for the most part.
So if for
those in work and perhaps at levels of income that are theoretically more
comfortable the future is far less secure, a job change is always on the
horizon or nearer and how far the money might or will go is very uncertain,
what will they be doing?
Food in the
past was once one of the major parts of outlay.
For a time it became less and with more choice and availability. What happens if the food costs go up more
than incomes or inflation and both this consumption and other expenditure has
to be adjusted? We are being warned that
generally that food prices are set to rise steadily in the future.
The picture
above is “The Gleaners” by Millet; Grandma had a copy in her living room. As a young housewife she had to contend with
a family food budget that amounted to around forty percent of the household
income. There wasn’t much left for
either luxuries or conspicuous consumption.
Each spear
of our asparagus cost close to 20 pence each.
There was a time when I could buy a three course meal in an ABC
restaurant in London
for less than that.
"What happens if the food costs go up more than incomes or inflation and both this consumption and other expenditure has to be adjusted?"
ReplyDeleteMany older people could probably cope by going back to essentials, but I'm not so sure about the takeaway generation.
And how are takeaways likely to trim their costs? I think we already know the answer to that one.