Slacker G wrote:No one complains much about the fact that Walmarts low pricing has caused others to significantly lower their prices in order to compete, and by that consumers benefit whether they shop at Walmart or not. I just bought a new washer from a mom and pop store. Perhaps I could have made a better deal, but I didn't ask for one, and I am sure I could have made out better purchasing from a chain store.
I enjoy the fact that Sears, Target, Shopco, and the other chains have Walmart to help hold down the prices of the things that I need.
After this regime gos through my wallet there isn't much left to buy anything that isn't sold at bargain prices. And it isn't getting better. Every dollar they are printing has unlawfully taxed my savings along with every dollar I have earned.
Walmart is the "King" of "Getr done fer next to nothing". To sell a product line, the WM business analysts tell you what your margin of cost will need to be, in order to stock their shelves with your product. As a result, vendors have sacrificed enormous quality to meet those "standards" of cost. There are even a boatload testimonials by small vendors, who had to "re-invent " their own products to meet the WM criteria of low costs.
Now, when Sears gets wind that Walmart can sell a washing machine at a fraction of what Sears charges, naturally, Sears is inclined to adopt the same cost-margin strategy that Walmart uses. To execute that strategy successfully, now Sears has to drop its quality. Its the same story for all the retailers... In fact, read about "The man who said no to Walmart: http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/102 ... apper.html.
He is an example of preserving product quality at reasonable cost, and manages to offer a reasonable price. He basically told Walmart to take a hike.
So, Slacker, when yo say that Walmart holds down the prices of things that you need, I can say with certainty that they also hold down the quality (and in many cases, the longevity) of your purchased products.
If you got anything from my original post , you probably noticed the math of replacing the coffee pots.
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9 * 3 == 27 bucks a year to make a simple coffee (maximum bulk of 4 cups)
27 * 6years = 162.00 bucks on a 4-cup simple coffee unit-OR-
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150 * 1 , = 150 Bucks on a 12 cup , cappuccino, latte, chai-tea spewing unit that will last about ten years.To bring that 150.00 down to say 50 dollars for the same features, something has to give. The number one sacrifice is quality of workmanship, parts materials , or both.



