21 Real-Life Signs We're in a Recession

BREWER

Veteran Member
Mods: I trust no one has posted this article. If they have please leave it up for the duration of the day.

Folks no doubt we at TB2K know we've been a RECESSION for some time and we could add a few more 'examples' of evidence to support the premise. Thank you for your time. Fair use applies...

http://money.aol.com/special/real-life-signs-were-in-a-recession

21 Real-Life Signs We're in a Recession

What a Recession Looks Like
Are we in a recession? Officially, that's up to a nonprofit group of economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research to decide. While their declaration is based on facts and figures, we took a more "average Joe" approach to determine whether we are already in the midst of the big "R."


Our bloggers spied more than 20 new trends in everyday life that seem to say we are. Click through our gallery to see what they're seeing.

No. 1: They Stole What?

Thieves have taken to removing catalytic converters, which help control emissions, from the underside of parked vehicles. The converters contain trace amounts of platinum and rhodium --which go for about $2,054 and $9,278 per ounce, respectively -- and can be sold on the black market for a couple hundred dollars each. Victims, however, pay much more than that for replacement parts.

No. 2: A Little Off' 'Target?'

Who better to weigh in on consumer behavior, than the people who work in retail stores. For example, a merchandiser who works in a Maryland Target has noticed she is getting fewer items for the displays that she manages and that the store traffic has been considerably less since the holidays. She says there don't seem to be as many people shopping and they are moving less merchandise.

No. 3: Joining the Club

Costco is one of the few retailers doing pretty well these days. Why? As Americans increasingly worry about the rising price of food, more are finally biting the bullet and joining wholesale clubs, like Costco. Case in point: WalletPop.com blogger Amey Stone recently jumped on the wholesale bandwagon. She says, "No matter how secure my husband and I feel in our own jobs, we see rising job insecurity all around us. Given that backdrop, I decided it really is worth it to pay $50 to join the Costco club."

No. 4: Wedding Watch

Even with weddings, people are increasingly watching their pennies. They are booking the affairs in off-peak times and reducing the number of guests they invite, according to the National Association of Catering Executives. People also are increasingly bargaining with caterers to keep their costs low without sacrificing the pomp of what should be a once-in-a-lifetime event. For example, don't be surprised if you attend an otherwise lavish wedding this year that does without a Viennese Table, a selection of deserts served at the close of an affair.

No. 5: Plenty of Tee Time

Planning on hitting the links this summer? You may not have to worry that much about bumping into other golfers because there are fewer of them. According to The New York Times, people are quitting the sport in droves, partly because of economic reasons, such as corporations cutting back on country club memberships. This has occurred despite the popularity of Tiger Woods.

No. 6: No New Car for Now

The auto industry, which already is hurting mightily, is trying to convince buyers to jump into a new car with lots of incentives. That's because dealers are desperate as thousands of Americans decide to delay their purchase of a new car this year.

No. 7: Wait-Free Cheesecake

Getting a reservation at your favorite restaurant has gotten a lot easier lately -- too easy for the liking of owners of dining establishments. Sales are down at chains ranging from Red Lobster to Ruth's Chris Steakhouse.

Anecdotally, one of AOL Money & Finance's editors was recently able to get immediate seating at the Cheesecake Factory in Sterling, Va. -- during prime-time dinner hours on a Thursday night. Previously, the wait had always been more than an hour.

No. 8: Unusual Home Parties

Move over Pampered Chef and Mary Kay, "gold party" services are coming to town. Companies like My Gold Party and Gold Party by ADI have sprung up offering to help convert your friends' gold to cash, either by supplying you (for a fee) with the equipment and training for do-it-yourself appraisals or by sending a representative to your home who will set up shop in your kitchen.

No. 9: Bye-Bye Businesses

The National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB) reports for March that it's Small Business Optimism Index is at its lowest point since the second quarter of 1980. Businesses are complaining that increased selling prices are not keeping up with overhead inflationary pressures. Nearly one-quarter indicated that they raised employee compensation by a margin which is outstripping profitability increases. Headlines abound of popular retailers shutting down some (or all!) of its stores: Home Depot, Sharper Image & many others

No. 10: Repo Men Revival

Repo men have some enviable careers right now. Newspapers around the country have been publishing stories about local repo men raking in the bucks, taking away mostly vehicles, from cars to campers, and motorcycles to motor boats. According to KHOU, a Houston TV news station, 1.5 million vehicles were repossessed last year, a 15-percent increase from 2006. 2008 is expected to jump 10 percent from 2007

No. 11: Payday Lenders

Nationwide, Americans pay about $5 billion a year to borrow more than $40 billion from payday lenders. Even those who know what a bad deal these types of high-interest loans are, are not immune to them today. WalletPop blogger Geoff Williams, never intended to step foot inside a payday lending establishment ... until this year.

No. 12: Empty Mall Events

Walletpop blogger Josh Smith shares this story: One of my friends is in charge of marketing at a nearby mall, and works closely with their kids program. The program provides fun activities for children, during which parents can either put on a tiara or spend time shopping without junior in tow. Even though the event is free, attendance has been drastically down due to a lack of incentive to use the free daycare the events provide. In short, parents don't need their children watched, because they don't have the money to shop

No. 13: Concert Cutbacks

According to frequent sporting-event and concert-goer Josh Smith, spending $100 plus dinner on a show or baseball game while food and gas prices are rising seems frivolous. This year he and his wife missed the entire season of their favorite minor league hockey team and passed on seeing one of their favorite comedians

No. 14: Odd Biz Combos

There is a growing movement of small businesses to compensate for falling sales by adding new business products. For example, blogger Tobias Bucknell shares that the dojo in his hometown has added a new side business to its martial arts: balloons. In Tom Barlow's neighborhood, the local model train shop is now also making banners.

No. 15: The Well-Off Hit Thrifts

Picture this, thrift store brethren: A woman in a late model Mercedes parks next to you and wanders into your favorite thrift store. What's going on, you wonder, not a little put out by the sight of an apparently well-off member of society making use of "your" affordable consumer items. What's going on here is an over-all belt-tightening. As the economy loses steam, people fear for the jobs, and the house-ATM machine dries up, people are looking at all the ways they can save. Frugality has suddenly become "in."

No. 16: Trimming Travel

A lot of people are canceling or dramatically altering discretionary travel these days. With the ever-shrinking dollar, travel for fun and pleasure has dropped far down on the list of splurges for many middle class families. Gasoline prices, groceries, utilities, rents, day-to-day living expenses are taking a larger-than-ever chunk out of our budgets.

No. 17: Summer Camp Cuts

If you have a couple of kids enrolled for four to six weeks, as many are, summer camp can set you back more than $10,000. WalletPop blogger Michelle Turk spent $3,000 last year, but not this year. She plans to either skip camp altogether or find town-run camps that are a few hundred dollars vs. a few thousand.

No. 18: No Zoo Too

Another place that parents like WalletPop blogger Sarah Gilbert is avoiding in these cash-crunched times is the local zoo. And no, it's not because of the price of admission. It's the treat stands at every turn that have the kids shouting "gimme" and mom shelling out $20 for non-nutritious junk.

No. 19: Coffee House Chaos

Blogger Tom Barlow has a favorite coffee shop. However, it's undergone a change in the past few months. More and more frequently, formerly vacant tables are occupied by middle-aged executive types with their brand-new laptops, cell phones and lattes poised for action that never comes. Barlow suspects they are in the same boat as one of the fellows he knows, recently cut free as a part of recession-driven downsizing.

No. 20: Sin City Slowdown

In the market for a Vegas vacation? Now might be a great time. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that "Reacting to a national economic slump that has depressed gambling revenues and room rates ... casino and hotel operators are offering up a buffet of spring time deals normally reserved for the hot, slow summer months." Room rates have fallen more than 20%conventioneers aren't staying as long as they used to, gaming revenue is down slightly, and it's easier to get in to A-list clubs than it used to be.

No. 21: Living With Gramps

Does the thought of moving to a new city after graduation, as the economy heads towards a recession, frighten you? If so, you may want to do what some whippersnappers are doing; moving in with grandma and grandpa in order to save money on rent. Many families are making it work. Living with your grandparents can also provide benefits to the entire family ,who can rest easy having someone around to help out around the house and be a point of contact in case of emergencies.
 

blackguard

Veteran Member
Some very interesting items in that list

There will be more signs as the times continue to press the wallets of us all. We have cut way back on discretionary spending. Limit our driving to what is necessary and take advantage of every sale we can.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Me, too...

There will be more signs as the times continue to press the wallets of us all. We have cut way back on discretionary spending. Limit our driving to what is necessary and take advantage of every sale we can.

Trooper: We drive a lot less, stock up at Sam's/Costco, and I haul my trash to the dump now instead of a pick-up service. We unfortunately have Heating Oil which as I type is setting a new record[~US$3.8495/gallon]. The furnace has to be turned on here to 'heat' the hot water. I hover over that furnace on/off switch like Ebeneezer Scrooge, and turn the furnace off after we have just enough hot water for cooking, cleaning, showers, etc. All light switches are turned off when someone leaves the room. BTW. those are the CF bulbs, too. Yep, we use the linear solar clothes dryer[Read: Clothesline] when possible and hang dry all clothes on the shower curtain rod when we can. This reminds me of the '74 and '79-'80 oil shock(s)! I'm making my own pizza and have for almost six months. Fortunately, we make our own ale around here. I stopped going down to the 'watering hole' late last year. We've got a good sized garden, and it's looking pretty healthy, Praise The Lord. We are working hard, too. Best of luck to you and your family.
 

Bad Hand

Veteran Member
We have cut way back on driving, I am making most everything from scratch like baking beard and deserts. Wages aren't going up but everything else is.
 

Troke

Deceased
College graduation impends. If the kids come home, we are a 1981-84 recession at least. They don't come home, things are not that bad...for college educated at least.
 

bluemoon

Veteran Member
My DH works in manufacturing. His company is having the people who work there including the office take vacation time to make a full work week right now.
We live 50 miles one way to his job. During the week he is staying at his Mom and Dad's to save on gas. They live 5 miles from his job. So I am left alone in the woods except for my 3 best friends that all have 4 legs.

Bluemoon
 

Spot

Veteran Member
Has anyone noticed at all the yard sales ? There seanes to be a lot more than there was this time last year. Also have you noticed all the SUV's that are sitting in front of peoples homes with a for sale sign in the window ?
Spot
 

Nanook

Inactive
I notice quite a few large SUVs with For Sale signs in them. Also boats seem to be for sale in large numbers.

Boats have been described as a hole in the water you shovel money into, and that's by boating enthusiasts.

Strangely, motorcycles seem to be for sale everywhere too, although that's common in spring as people try to take advantage of the coming warm weather to move bikes they don't want.

I was at a gun store today, and saw a custom Kimber .45 in the cabinet. The owner said somebody sold it to him so the former owner could make a car payment. This could be a sign of the times we're in.

Also, gas by me just crested over $4 for the first time. Yesterday it was $3.92, today it was $4.09.
 

Trek

Inactive
Has anyone noticed at all the yard sales ? There seanes to be a lot more than there was this time last year. Also have you noticed all the SUV's that are sitting in front of peoples homes with a for sale sign in the window ?
Spot

Yuppers... And those SUVs that were going for and easy 5 grand just a year ago are selling for less than 1 grand... if being purchased at all. Most are sitting on the side of the road, gathering dust, with the price tag repeatedly being lowered.

Says alot considering how bad the roads are around here. People in my neck of the woods couldn't dream of being without 4 wheel drive before now.
 

Thyme

Under His Wing
[
quote=Nanook;2855648]I notice quite a few large SUVs with For Sale signs in them. Also boats seem to be for sale in large numbers.

Boats have been described as a hole in the water you shovel money into, and that's by boating enthusiasts.

Strangely, motorcycles seem to be for sale everywhere too, although that's common in spring as people try to take advantage of the coming warm weather to move bikes they don't want.

I was at a gun store today, and saw a custom Kimber .45 in the cabinet. The owner said somebody sold it to him so the former owner could make a car payment. This could be a sign of the times we're in.

Also, gas by me just crested over $4 for the first time. Yesterday it was $3.92, today it was $4.09.[/quote]


The noose is getting tighter :(
 

Ellie

Senior Member
Mercedes and similar now at resale stores

Yup, only these ladies are 'sneaking' in the local resale shop to place their fancy goodies and clothes on consignment. It makes me chuckle to see them 'slumming it' and hoping none of their friends from their rich neighborhoods see them selling their stuff.

Also, this past Sunday I was at Costco in Stone Oak area of San Antonio, Tx - rather upscale area - and it was more crowded than I have ever seen it, even Xmas was not this packed with shoppers, and almost all had food - lots and lots of food filling their carts. This is an area where I usually see electronic goodies and china and such trivia in carts... folks, I think the dgi's are startong to wake up
 

SouthernGal

"Don't retreat...reload"
There will be more signs as the times continue to press the wallets of us all. We have cut way back on discretionary spending. Limit our driving to what is necessary and take advantage of every sale we can.

Yep. We're about to dump our cell phones to get rid of that monthly bill.
 

marieb

Senior Member
I went to the Orange County Swap Meet with my daughter last Saturday. I hadn't been to the swap meet in over a year. I was shocked that more than a third of the regular vendors are no longer there; and a large part of the swap meet has been turned into a used car sales lot (but no one seemed to be buying!).

Even when I go to Costco, there aren't as many people there; and folks' carts are only 1/3 filled, on average.

marieb
 
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