Coping - Feb 23
by Staff
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The economic malaise that plagued Japan from the 1990s until the early 2000s brought stunted wages and depressed stock prices, turning free-spending consumers into misers and making them dead weight on Japan’s economy. Today, years after the recovery, even well-off Japanese households use old bath water to do laundry, a popular way to save on utility bills. Sales of whiskey, the favorite drink among moneyed Tokyoites in the booming ’80s, have fallen to a fifth of their peak. And the nation is losing interest in cars; sales have fallen by half since 1990. The Takigasaki family in the Tokyo suburb of Nakano goes further to save a yen or two. Although the family has a comfortable nest egg, Hiroko Takigasaki carefully rations her vegetables. When she goes through too many in a given week, she reverts to her cost-saving standby: cabbage stew. ... [Young Japanese] tend to be uninterested in cars; a survey last year by the business daily Nikkei found that only 25 percent of Japanese men in their 20s wanted a car, down from 48 percent in 2000, contributing to the slump in sales. .. Economists blame this slow spending on widespread distrust of Japan’s pension system, which is buckling under the weight of one of the world’s most rapidly aging societies.
It's more than the thrill of recognition from my thrifty Scottish roots, though I was raised not to waste by a single mother who sent all five of her kids to college. The fact is, I never felt entirely comfortable with all that consumption, the glam decorating ethos of La Martha, the relentless march of the high end into the kitchens and bedrooms and closets of those of us fortunate enough to be counted upper-middle class. I recognize that this meltdown is going to be terrible and painful for many millions of people. I've been a foreign reporter long enough to know that the end of this mad buying spree will likely trigger unrest and conflict in the many developing countries that produced all those great cheap, stylish goods, as well as at home, where all of us - including me - bought them. But in the end, it all seems like a necessary corrective. Alix Christie is a former foreign editor for The Chronicle. Her writing has appeared in the Washington Post Magazine, the Economist and on Salon.com.
Unless you're an expert gardener, discard the illusion that you'll be able to support your household on what you can grow on your little urban patch. The best most of us will be able to do is to supplement what we buy at the grocery store – at least, in the short run. Russian émigré writer Dmitry Orlov, though, notes in his recent book, Reinventing Collapse, that in the face of Soviet-era agricultural collapse and mass poverty, "kitchen gardens turned out to be lifesavers." It would be unwise to assume we Americans will never need kitchen gardens. It also would be unwise to assume that all you need to do is throw a few seeds into the ground and wait for the harvest. Trial and error is a master teacher. Better to acquire those skills now, while you have the luxury of making mistakes. We haven't seen economic uncertainty like this since the Great Depression, when gardening, and the skills it required, was far more common in our country.
So she literally dusted off a decade-old pair of ragged black leather boots sitting in her closet, and visited a shoe repair shop for the first time in her life. For a fashion-conscious woman, the thought of recycling 10-year old boots with worn out heels did hurt her pride a bit. "I walked in with my tail between my legs," she says. "It was something, initially, I was not proud of." Then she saw the price: $16. And the work: the boots looked good as new. "I walked out of there going, 'okay, all right," Thorsen says. She proudly wore her healed heels to all her holiday parties.
This weekend two unique shows will be going on simultaneously at the center. The first is the Amish Home and Garden Show. It consists of hundreds of booths that will feature what promoters are calling “some of the finest Amish carpenters and craftsmen in Ohio.” There will be vendors who specialize in cooking products, building items, furniture, landscaping, kitchens, bathrooms as well as flooring, windows, siding and services. “This will be a very unique event for people to visit,” said Jody Witzky of JW Promotions, promoter of the show. “Curious folks won’t be disappointed. There will be something here for absolutely everyone.” According to Witzky, the difference from other large-scale home and garden shows is found in the name. “Most of our vendors, approximately 75 percent actually, are Amish and we are excited to be a part of promoting them to the local community as well as those who are visiting from other areas,” she said. Over the years, The Budget has earned a faithful following by providing its readers with a unique newspaper; a newspaper in which the good news reported in its pages routinely outweighs the bad.
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