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- <text id=90TT1932>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: Hunkering Down
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 56
- Hunkering Down
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After the glitzy '80s, cheaper and careful are back in style
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro--Reported by David M. Gross/New York and
- Rosanne Spector/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly, it is fashionable to pinch pennies. Washington
- socialites Frank and Jayne Ikard are not taking their annual
- grand tour of Italy this year. Instead they plan to drop in on
- friends in Montana. Beverly Hills matron Joan Gross last week
- was browsing at the Price Club, a discount warehouse in nearby
- Inglewood, alongside an Asian restaurateur shopping for kitchen
- supplies and a Hispanic family buying low-price food in bulk.
- Said Gross: "Conspicuous consumption is out."
- </p>
- <p> The mad, impetuous '80s are over. The shop-till-you-drop
- gilded decade of excess, Rolex, baby millionaires and their
- legions of wannabes has given way to a new age of moderation
- and caution. Dynasty, meet Roseanne. In its June survey, the
- Conference Board, which every month measures consumer
- confidence across the U.S., found people more worried than at
- any time since 1987. The economic shock therapy that began with
- the Crash of '87 and continues with the $500 billion savings
- and loan debacle has given Americans a new appreciation of
- limits.
- </p>
- <p> Sobered by the sight of beleaguered billionaires and the
- collapse of corporate empires strung out on debt, U.S.
- consumers are hunkering down. They are borrowing less, shopping
- carefully and saving more. During the first six months of 1990,
- according to the Department of Commerce, consumer spending
- growth was flat. At the same time, consumer debt rose at an
- annual rate of only 3%, down from 7.6% in 1989 and 8.5% in
- 1988. Edward Hyman, chief economist at C.J. Lawrence, Morgan
- Granfel, a Manhattan brokerage firm, predicts a virtual
- standstill in consumer borrowing for the next 12 months, a
- phenomenon not seen since the 1950s. At the same time, socking
- away money is regaining popularity. In April the personal
- savings rate topped 6% for the first time in more than five
- years.
- </p>
- <p> At privately held Montgomery Ward (1989 sales: $5 billion),
- chairman Bernard Brennan sees the new consumer caution in the
- declining sales of such big-ticket items as appliances and
- furniture, usually two of his company's strongest categories.
- Says he: "People are beginning to worry. They are reading more
- today about factory layoffs and companies failing because of
- the debt restructuring of the '80s. There's a great deal of
- unrest out there about job security and even levels of pay."
- </p>
- <p> Generally, though, the mood is not so much one of abject
- fear as a mixture of resignation and relief. Resignation to
- diminished expectations, for one thing. The children of the
- large baby-boom generation are reaching their expensive teenage
- years, and college costs loom. Something's got to give. Many
- consumers also feel a back-to-basics sense of relief now that
- '80s icons like the Santa Fe look, sun-dried tomatoes and
- goat-cheese pizza have seen their day. Such ordinary pleasures
- as gardening, milk shakes and fried chicken and mashed potatoes
- are acceptable once more. Exclusive name brands no longer carry
- the same cachet or inspire the same hell-bent-for-leather
- efforts to pay for them, because nobody really expects anyone
- to be impressed. Says Martin Puris, chief executive of the
- Ammirati & Puris advertising agency in Manhattan: "The trend
- is pragmatism."
- </p>
- <p> Dropping thousands at a Ralph Lauren boutique has suddenly
- become excessive with the end of the era of the borrowed
- life-style. In fancy restaurants, fighting for the check has
- given way to fighting about the check. Says Denver developer
- Peter Janopaul: "Even in the better nightclubs, people are
- figuring their share of the check down to the penny. They're
- not embarrassed to do so--they're proud of it!"
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, buying top-price imports no longer seems so
- smart. Many U.S. products have regained their reputation for
- quality and value. U.S. sales of Porsches fell 69% from 1986
- to 1989, from 30,471 to 9,479, though they recovered 19% during
- the first five months of this year. BMW's U.S. sales dropped
- 33% from 1986 to 1989, from 96,759 to 64,881 cars, and slipped
- an additional 10% in the first five months of this year.
- </p>
- <p> Buying bargain imports, though, is smart, very smart. In
- Elizabeth, N.J., the grand opening of IKEA's 6.2-acre furniture
- store in May created nightmarish gridlock usually seen only for
- the nearby Giants football games. More than 25,000 eager
- shoppers heading for the Swedish-owned store jammed the New
- Jersey Turnpike, and 200 others camped in the parking lot
- overnight to get first crack at the firm's $39 bookcases, $7
- rag rugs, $98 pine beds and other basic furnishings. Parents
- could drop off their children in a play area supervised by
- store employees before turning to serious shopping. A lunch
- counter served plates of Swedish meatballs and boiled potatoes
- (price: $3).
- </p>
- <p> Old habits, of course, die hard. Even bargain hunters can
- get carried away when confronted with tempting prices. And many
- shoppers still rationalize luxury purchases as investments. In
- Santa Monica, Calif., the local Lexus dealer cannot keep the
- $40,000 Toyota sedans in stock. Customers say the car is worth
- much more than its sticker price. Posh shops on Rodeo Drive in
- Beverly Hills continue to be packed. But the days of wretched
- excess have passed for most consumers. Some of the same folks
- who dropped expensive brand names like credentials last year
- are impressing their friends by rattling off discount outlets
- and off-price brands.
- </p>
- <p> Even the rich and famous are not above looking for a
- bargain. Elysa Lazar publishes the S&B Report, a monthly
- compendium of up to 250 designer showroom sales where, on
- certain days, customers can buy overstock fashions from Donna
- Karan, Perry Ellis, Oscar de la Renta and other top designers
- for 50% off. Well-heeled subscribers include Dr. Joyce
- Brothers, Regis Philbin and Sally Jessy Raphael. After Joan
- Lunden mentioned Lazar's new mail-order catalog on Good Morning
- America two months ago, 80,000 viewers wrote to request the
- guide to discount suppliers of everything from wallpaper and
- pet food to boating equipment and books. Bubbles the publisher:
- "There is a movement growing in the country, a mini-revolution.
- Consumers are putting their feet down and refusing to pay high
- prices."
- </p>
- <p> Things have gone so far that getting your home featured in
- Architectural Digest, an honor to die for in the '80s, is
- considered tacky. After all, most of the homes are not so much
- designed as crammed with very expensive clutter. Interior
- decorators are outre, and making slipcovers and clothes for the
- children seems to be gaining favor. Fabri-Centers of America,
- a chain of 620 fabric stores in 35 states, reports that
- earnings have grown 72% in the past year, from $5.1 million to
- $8.8 million, while revenues are up 15%, to $333 million.
- Chairman Alan Rosskamm attributes his company's new growth to
- a renewed interest in puttering around the house and making
- things from scratch. Sales at K mart were up 16%, to $7
- billion, during the first quarter.
- </p>
- <p> Consumers fed up with $100-plus price tags for top-drawer
- Nike Air Jordans or Reebok Pumps are turning back to $25 plain
- canvas Keds, the reliable old workhorse of the athletic-shoe
- industry. Keds sales rose from $150 million in 1988 to $200
- million in 1989, and are expected to top $230 million this
- year, at a time when most companies' sales are slowing.
- </p>
- <p> While busy Americans are eating almost as many meals out as
- ever, they are hunting harder for bargains. Surveying
- restaurant-dining patterns across the country between December
- and February, the NPD Group, a Port Washington, N.Y., market
- research firm, reported that ethnic and quick-service outlets
- fared best. Some top eateries have shaved prices 10% to 20% to
- keep their kitchens busy. Many popular night spots that would
- have shunned families two or three years ago have added
- children's plates and have hung out the welcome sign. At home,
- catered dinners have largely been replaced by casual cookouts.
- </p>
- <p> Is the new consumer caution bad for the U.S. economy? In the
- long run, a renewed emphasis on savings, and a preference for
- products that work over those that impress can only be healthy.
- If U.S. manufacturers and service firms find that they must
- offer greater value to win customers at home, they will be
- learning lessons that should improve their chances of doing
- business abroad. Frenetic consumers who spent much of the
- decade trying to have it all and wondering how to deal with the
- resulting stress may find unexpected serenity in their
- backyards. A touch of the tightwad is a much needed correction
- after the excesses of the '80s.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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