New York Post's Ryan Sager Thinks New Yorkers Hate Unions, Prefer Wal-Mart to Neighborhood Groceries, and He is Wrong on Both Counts
New Yorkers love their neighborhood grocery stores. Don't look for that fact in the New York Post. Grab the August 14 issue of neighborhood paper Our Town for a story called "The Tale of the Vanishing Grocery Stores," about battles New Yorkers are waging to keep neighborhood supermarket chains like Gristede's and D'Agostino's. From Friday's New York Post you could never guess that grocery stores are part of the New York way of life. A violently pro-Wal-Mart column by Ryan Sager, Cheap Groceries: The Real Gripe on Wal-Mart, never mentions neighborhoods. What does he say about those New York supermarket chains that we fight for? They are "flabby" unionized grocery stores, per Ryan Sager. Flabby. Did I mention that Ryan Sager
doesn't like unions?
Apart from the attacks and hyperbole, Mr. Sager says nothing for Wal-Mart except that it offers low prices. His complaints about opponents are the following: (i) those he talked to are union activists, and (ii) without Wal-Mart food prices will be higher than with Wal-Mart. He says nothing about walkable shopping, nothing about the effect of suburban big box stores like Wal-Mart on traffic and demands for more highways. Nothing about the effect of suburban big box stores on our transit-oriented urban lives. For more criticisms of the Sager piece look at the August 12 item on The Neighborhood Retail Alliance. The Post is supposed to be a conservative paper. Where does it present the conservative case against the big box stores?
Let me tell you some things about low prices. First, anyone can offer low prices, if he's willing to steal. I can buy a low-priced Vuitton handbag from the guys downstairs on Third Avenue and 86th Street. Either it is stolen or it's an illegal knock-off, and the design is stolen. Second, anyone can offer low prices, if he can get employees to work for peon wages. That is what the American unions did away with, once upon a time. Just remember, the Triangle Shirtwaist Company sold its blouses for lower prices than if it had paid its seamstresses more money and not locked them into the workroom so they couldn't get out in a fire. Wal-Mart can offer low prices by shifting the cost of employees' health care to the taxpayers, and by shifting the cost of using factories in China to the garment manufacturers here in New York that it forces out of business, with loss of jobs and loss to every part of the New York economy.
It is a shame that Ryan Sager thinks that life is a one-value proposition: price is the only variable. New Yorkers like a bargain, but if we lose our neighborhoods, nothing is a bargain worth having. Mr. Sager should wake up, renounce his simple suburban view of economics with its black-and-white picture of haves and have-nots, and look at the complexity of the New York City economy for starters, and then at the complexity of neighborhood life. How do stores fit the neighborhoods? How do union jobs add to the economy? Those are the questions, not whether unions raise the cost of a roll of paper towels.
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