Retail Industry in Crisis

Ya' Cousin Cleon

OG COUCH CORNER HUSTLA
Joined
Jun 21, 2014
Messages
24,285
Reputation
-1,535
Daps
82,079
Reppin
Harvey World to Dallas, TX
With the rise of technology, the invention of the internet, and an overall shift towards convenience, the retail industry as we know it is changing rapidly. Amazon, Jeff Bezos’ multi-billion dollar corporation, is becoming the Sears catalogue of the future. Workers are faced with uncertainty as big-box stores are replaced by websites and warehouses and jobs are lost. As wages remain stagnant and health-care costs continue to rise, this crisis leaves retail workers at the mercy of a backwards capitalist system where a few people own the majority of the wealth.

Just A Click Away
If goods are available to us through a simple click of a button, all we have to do is select “one-day shipping” to save ourselves time and a trip to the store. Big-box retail stores are quickly becoming obsolete as online shopping increases. Half of all U.S. households are Amazon Prime subscribers, with convenience at their fingertips. Rather than seeking out storefronts, retail businesses are on the hunt for warehouses to feed the supply and demand of quick and easy online shopping. Traditional retailers are struggling to compete with companies like Amazon, eBay, and Wayfair, to name a few.

As the retail industry changes, the ones who suffer the most are the workers. Retail is the most significant employer in the U.S. with an estimated 4.6 million full and part-time employees. In the past year, 89,000 jobs have been lost, plunging these refugees of the retail crisis into financial instability. While the warehouses replacing big-box stores can offer new homes to some employees, they certainly won’t make up the difference, leaving possibly millions jobless and mostly unable to support themselves or their families.

Department Store Decline
Following the end of World War II and during the post-war economic upswing, department stores were revelling in their glory. New highway infrastructure shuttled families from the suburbs to shopping malls – convenient, climate-controlled monuments to consumerism with lots of parking. However, in the wake of the Great Recession, mall visits declined a staggering 50% between 2010-13 as consumers became bargain shoppers and department store shopping was replaced with thrifting. When anchor stores like Macy’s or Sears leave a mall, the whole space can lose business. Hundreds of vacant retail stores across the country are being turned into trampoline parks and community colleges.
While there was a slight recovery after the ‘07-‘08 recession and workers see more money in their pockets as wages rise thanks to campaigns like the Fight for $15, the results are shallow. Wages are still in a long term decline which means a decline in purchasing power for a big section of the population.

The collapse of large parts of the retail sector is a warning sign for capitalism reflecting the massive growth of inequality. What was called the “middle class” in the U.S. – including big sections of the working class – is being relentlessly squeezed. This has already led to political upheaval and it will lead to a social explosion in the coming period.

The Madness of Capitalism: Retail Industry in Crisis
 

Carlton Banks

Upper Class
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2014
Messages
20,762
Reputation
2,715
Daps
79,177
This is actually worse than people understand. Do people not realize how many folks will be out of a job? Especially black people? Retail is basically the main bridge between sinking or swimming for a lot of people. Even though I hated the industry, it was my first job and the only job I was qualified for when I was 19 and just getting my feet wet. Things are about to get really bad out here
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

The Coli Is Not For You
Supporter
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
46,172
Reputation
7,500
Daps
105,732
Reppin
The Opposite Of Elliott Wilson's Mohawk
How can people shop without seeing and touching the item first. I hate trying on clothes but I be damn if I order a shirt and it comes in to big or small. Now I gotta wait to get a next one and hope it's right?

Nah I'll pass
Which is why certain kinds of brick and mortar retail will never die. But logically speaking, online shopping just makes so much more sense. Think about how much wasted time brick and mortar retail requires. Most people are at work now. Who is at the mall? Meanwhile I can buy something online at work.

Savvy brick and mortar businesses are riding the wave. For example a lot of grocers are doing online shop and in person pickup. Very smart use of resources and a win-win for everybody. The only constant is change. Adapt or die :manny: The real tragedy here is that the powers that be aren't helping people to make necessary transitions. Anyone who was hoping to retire on a retail job was sorely mistaken.
 

TL15

Veteran
Joined
Mar 4, 2015
Messages
17,312
Reputation
14,188
Daps
139,854
Unfortunately this is what happens with technology :manny:

You think people used trains as much for travel once airplanes came out? :usure:

It happens in industries all the time. We are in an industrial shift. I feel bad for people losing their jobs but this isn't the first time and it won't be the last time that technology changes the way people interact with the world.
 

MikelArteta

Moderator
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
265,072
Reputation
35,135
Daps
809,340
Reppin
Goatganda the pearl of Africa
Exactly should we cry for the milkman?
Should we cry for blockbuster?
Adapt
I'd rather shop online and Amazon makes it so easy for returns.

Which is why certain kinds of brick and mortar retail will never die. But logically speaking, online shopping just makes so much more sense. Think about how much wasted time brick and mortar retail requires. Most people are at work now. Who is at the mall? Meanwhile I can buy something online at work.

Savvy brick and mortar businesses are riding the wave. For example a lot of grocers are doing online shop and in person pickup. Very smart use of resources and a win-win for everybody. The only constant is change. Adapt or die :manny: The real tragedy here is that the powers that be aren't helping people to make necessary transitions. Anyone who was hoping to retire on a retail job was sorely mistaken.
 
Joined
Jun 11, 2013
Messages
41,726
Reputation
6,388
Daps
109,262
Reppin
Birmingham, Alabama
Which is why certain kinds of brick and mortar retail will never die. But logically speaking, online shopping just makes so much more sense. Think about how much wasted time brick and mortar retail requires. Most people are at work now. Who is at the mall? Meanwhile I can buy something online at work.

Savvy brick and mortar businesses are riding the wave. For example a lot of grocers are doing online shop and in person pickup. Very smart use of resources and a win-win for everybody. The only constant is change. Adapt or die :manny: The real tragedy here is that the powers that be aren't helping people to make necessary transitions. Anyone who was hoping to retire on a retail job was sorely mistaken.

With the rise of automation, people are going to be saying this about a lot of jobs over the next 10-30 years.
 
Top