<font color="blue">Found this article very interesting.
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/77/walmart.html
What do you think? </font>
I think the main problem is volume discounting. How can any small retailer be competative if they can't get product to sell at the same wholesale price as the big guys? It is fairly obvious that all small retailers are doomed to extinction as long as this goes on. Eventually, there will be just one big retailer. Same thing is happening to small farms, small banks, small pharmacies, small newspapers, radio stations, TV stations, lawn tractor companies, etc...
I have to watch my family's dollars and cents. I usually try to get the best deal on the best products. I have to. I don't care to shop at Walmart for various reasons, but what are my alternatives? Meijer, Sam's Club(same as Walmart), Kmart(slowly vanishing), Lowes, Menards, Home Depot? There just aren't many small retailers left. We are lucky to have a locally owned grocery store chain here. I like their prices and selection as well as the service, but even they are growing all the time. They have bought out some of the smaller local stores. They're giving the big guys a run for their money, but they are getting bigger in the process.
It's the economics of scale. It stinks, I don't like it, but that is the reality of it. Someone has to make the products that we need. With a global economy, the hungriest, most ambitious people are going to do whatever it takes to get the jobs making those products. America use to be the hungriest, most ambitious country. It isn't anymore. I figure that until the whole world gets involved and the pay scale evens out across the world we will see declining wages in America, Japan and Western Europe and rising wages in the rest of the world. That's my outlook for the traditional working class people in this country. If they want to maintain their standard of living, they will have to adapt by either getting higher paying jobs in non-manufacturing/non-labor jobs, partner up with a spouse to get two incomes or lower their expenses(less luxuries). My wife and I have chosen a combination of all three. I just wonder how hard it will be for my children when they hit the job market.
As for buying American, it is nice to be able to buy a good, quality product that is made in America. If I need something and I find it in both American and foreign models, if all other things are equal, I'll buy the American product. Why not support the home team, right? But if the foreign product is superior, it's coming home with me. That's common sense and I have no problem with that.