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- <text id=91TT0225>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: All Wired And Wary
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 58
- All Wired and Wary
- </hdr><body>
- <p>American consumers react to war and hard times by hunkering
- down, embracing reality and trying to find a few bright spots
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro--Reported by Mary Cronin/New York and William
- McWhirter/Chicago, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Colin Powell is a military man, not a marketing analyst, but
- he keenly recognized the mood of American consumers last week,
- when he talked about the "oscillations between euphoria and
- distress." The shock of war's beginning has passed, but
- Americans are left swinging between the moods of hope and
- resignation about the war and the economy. In one sense,
- consumers are hunkering down, digging in and embracing reality.
- They are postponing big decisions and avoiding the kind of
- purchases that fuel the economy: autos, houses, appliances.
- (Suddenly the old car doesn't look so bad.) Yet simultaneously
- they realize that the unthinkable event of war has happened
- without the economy collapsing in a heap. The recognition that
- the U.S. just may muddle through all this has prompted some
- fits of optimism, impulse buying and a search for diversion.
- </p>
- <p> Most remarkably, a limited Desert Storm economy is springing
- up. Companies have boosted production of war-related books,
- maps, computer games, T-shirts, yellow ribbons, American flags
- in all forms and just about anything red, white and blue. At
- Bloomingdale's in Manhattan, the brand-new Stars & Stripes
- boutique drew crowds eager to buy Ralph Lauren coffee mugs
- (price: $40), leather bomber jackets ($500) and beach towels
- sporting Old Glory. Suddenly teenagers are wearing camouflage
- pants.
- </p>
- <p> Aside from spurts of patriotic shopping, many Americans were
- holding onto their wallets. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted last
- week by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, 56% of the 1,000 adults in
- the survey said they believe the war against Iraq will hurt the
- U.S. economy. Asked whether the recession has influenced their
- spending habits, 34% said they were spending less, while 64%
- professed no change.
- </p>
- <p> The fresh wave of sobriety among many consumers is likely
- to speed the shrinking of overbuilt parts of the economy,
- including retailing, real estate and car dealerships. Pleading
- for more money last week, officials in charge of the S&L
- bailout warned the Senate Banking Committee that real estate
- values are in a "free fall" that makes a mockery of attempts
- to estimate the total cost of the rescue. Meanwhile, the
- National Automobile Dealers Association predicted that 1 out of
- 5 car dealers may go out of business in the next two years.
- </p>
- <p> Of all the industries reeling under the one-two punch of
- recession and war, none have been hit as hard as the travel
- business. Across the U.S. last week, airports were eerily
- quiet. Rumors of terrorist plots were rife; some companies took
- the opportunity to cut back on travel in the midst of the
- recession, knowing that the competition would be following
- suit. This week, in an unprecedented move, most U.S.
- department-store fashion directors, magazine fashion editors
- and Seventh Avenue buyers will stay home from the annual couture
- collections in Paris. The shutdown of European travel may cut
- off Pan Am's last hope of surviving Chapter 11 proceedings.
- Last week TWA laid off 1,360 of its 6,800 flight attendants and
- about 100 of its 3,300 pilots. Companies are even curbing
- travel to innocuous U.S. destinations. Said a Manhattan
- businessman: "I wouldn't even fly to Kansas or Fort Worth right
- now. I simply don't believe in taking unnecessary risks."
- </p>
- <p> Travel cutbacks are hitting hotels and restaurants in
- Washington, Tokyo, Paris and other capitals as well. In Cairo
- the Egyptian government shut down the Pyramids and other
- monuments--and thus most of the tourism industry--to
- protect against terrorist threats. "It's a disaster. Because
- of the war, we are at a standstill," said Elhamy El Zayat,
- owner of one of Egypt's largest travel agencies. In Anaheim,
- Calif., Disneyland cut ticket prices for the first time ever,
- reducing one-day rates temporarily to $20 from $27 for people
- who live in Southern California. At a time when people are
- canceling vacations, local residents may help pick up the
- slack.
- </p>
- <p> Besides acting as a damper on business, the war and
- recession have shifted fortunes from one industry to another.
- The travel business's loss, for example, is the telephone
- industry's gain. Video conferencing and faxing are booming as
- executives shift to meeting electronically instead of in
- person. Since the war started, AT&T's video-conferencing
- traffic has doubled, while U.S. Sprint's has tripled.
- </p>
- <p> Some retailers are benefiting from overheated fears. Panicky
- consumers have rushed to military-surplus stores to buy gas
- masks. Many people want the masks for protection in case
- terrorists blow up chemical plants and oil refineries near
- them. Richard Muerdter, owner of the Eagle Army & Navy store
- in Louisville, says one frightened woman told him: "They're
- going to send terrorists over here to gas all of us." Some
- stores reported calls from anxious customers who wanted to know
- if Iraq's Scud missiles (top range: 560 miles) could reach the
- U.S. mainland. From California to Western Europe, there were
- scattered reports of people stockpiling such staples as flour,
- sugar and rice.
- </p>
- <p> Most Americans focused on products and services delivering
- news and information about the gulf. In Maplewood, N.J., the
- Hammond map company was working to fill 70,000 orders for a
- Middle East Crisis map published in October. Cable-TV companies
- have enjoyed a surge in business too, largely because many
- viewers suddenly feel they must have CNN. Travel agents
- reported that customers were demanding hotels with cable TV.
- Said Michael Arrington, chairman of a chain of travel agencies
- based in Chicago: "Getaway from it all is no longer a draw."
- </p>
- <p> Eager to tune in the overseas news, Americans bought
- shortwave radios and small portable TVs. Bookstores were
- jammed, their customers snapping up almost anything about
- Saddam and the Middle East. In Arlington, Va., Roy's Hobby &
- Craft Shop was selling the new $16 board game, Kuwait War.
- Superstitious types were buying crystals and such books as
- Nostradamus and Armageddon, Oil and the Mideast Crisis.
- </p>
- <p> Patriotism was everywhere. Tattoo parlors were overwhelmed
- with orders for eagles and Old Glory. In some cities, even the
- antiwar protesters sported American flag lapel pins next to
- their peace pins. Said Greg Wald, owner of the All Nations Flag
- Company in Kansas City: "The first week of the war was like
- Memorial Day and the Fourth of July combined. It hit like an
- earthquake." Consumer-watchdog groups, though, warned of con
- men already hatching heartless schemes. Swindlers in Hauppauge,
- N.Y., pretending to be cemetery employees, were urging veterans
- last week to buy graveyard plots before fresh war casualties
- filled up the best spots.
- </p>
- <p> For the millions of Americans who just want to send letters
- to loved ones on the front lines, Hallmark has introduced a
- homey new line of cards. One of them begins: "It takes a
- special person to serve our country..." Next, maybe the
- writers at the Kansas City firm will work on a set of soothing
- homilies for the 200 million anxious consumers on the home
- front. Having grown accustomed to the sudden scream of air-raid
- sirens in the darkness 7,000 miles away, they still have no
- idea how this war is going to change their lives and their
- economic futures.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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