Monday, 29 April 2013

SHOCK AT THE EDGE OF TOWN



Interviewed on BBC Radio Foyle (Mark Patterson Lunchtime Show, 5.4.2013) a property owner and businessman decries large retailers for scavenging on the edges of towns, destroying them.

Tesco, a British and multi-national retailer, seeks to open a grand store on the edge of Derry Londonderry (54 degrees North, 7 degrees West). It already has a down-town outlet and one more edge-of-town grand store in another edge-of-town location.

There are, as the BBC presenters rush to explain, offer retailers selling food and other products. Ditto in Derry Londonderry.

Ironies abound, as always. The particular area where Tesco seeks to build its new store already has two large retailers in place.: Dunnes and Supervalue, both, as it happens, Irish-owned companies. Sinn Féin (SF), an Irish nationalist political party, appears to back Tesco's plans to open in the area. There is positive demand from many residents nearby. The Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), also an Irish nationalist party, appears to oppose the development.

The words 'appears to' are necessary in this highly charged and highly sensitive matter. Anything that blocks jobs coming to the economically challenged city of Derry Londonderry is a political no-no.

The man on the BBC Radio Foyle argues that no new jobs will be created. Jobs will be displaced from existing retail outfits, which, he argues, will close. Jobs in construction will be short-term, non -specialist and few. Many sub-contracting functions will, of necessity, be delivered by non-indigenous companies.

The man on the radio speaks of anti-scavenger laws in Canada in response to these developments. A major political row rumbles on in India between indigenous, often very wealthy, retailers and global arrivistes such as Walmart and Carrefour.

The notion that the larger retailers are somehow better took a hammering recently with the discovery of horse-meat in products labelled as 'beef'. The push for profit at all levels of the food industry leaves shoppers shocked and awed.

As an aside, the best joke of the many that emerged during the horse-meat scandal concerns fish, not meat: Did you hear that Donegal Catch (big fish processors) have pulled their products off the supermarket shelves? Why? They found seahorse in the cod.

Appeals to the concepts of consumer choice, retail freedom, fair trading, the sovereignty of the market are all made publicly, usually by spokespersons for Tescos. The ironies heap on.

An intriguing aspect of all of this is the role played by the car and the oil industries. Many people walk to the large edge-of-town retail outfits. But the vast majority of us drive to car-parks built on acres of tarmac.

We drive, park, shop, load up and drive home. If we shopped differently, would the economy collapse?

This is the season for eating lamb in Ireland, as daffodils press forth. Images on BBC television of sheep and lamb carcasses laid out in mass graves, on hillsides blanched grimy white by thawing snow, present the actualities of the front end of our food industry.

Our hands chill as we reach for the pre-packed cutlets in the Tesco edge-of-town store. The oil barons grin as we count our pennies and return to our cars to drive home to feed our young.

As the free market economy has no social or moral requisites, war, disaster, and instability are suitable avenues for profit. Accordingly, market interests will attempt to privatise sectors like defence and military, and use war and instability to their profit.
More and more people, Klein feels, are becoming aware of the pitfalls of free market thinking, its underlying motives, and the gap between its realisation and freedom, equality, or democracy. “The shock doctrine is losing its efficacy due to overuse, just as torture techniques wear off over time.” Some people and countries are seeking ways of helping themselves, and helping each other, rather than becoming dependent on international manipulation with a free market agenda.




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