July 3, 2008 6:50 PM
- Text
'Inferior Goods' Prove Superior in Downturn
(MoneyWatch) Economists call them "inferior goods" and they are fast becoming a hot commodity.
Inferior goods are simply the kinds of low-priced alternatives that people turn to during hard economic times. And not only the poor.
"We're seeing more Mercedes and BMWs in Wal-Mart parking lots, and Wal-Mart shoppers are going to dollar stores," said John Bishop, a consultant at GfK Roper, a research outfit, as quoted in Investor's Business Daily.
Sales of Spam and Wonder Bread are spiking, he said. The dollar menu at McDonald's is growing more popular. Wal-Mart is up; Target is down.
For most companies, this phenomenon will last only as long as the recession, or downturn, or whatever it is we're calling it. The restaurant chain Chipotle may be hurting now, but there's no reason to think its traffic won't return when times are good again.
Inferior goods are simply the kinds of low-priced alternatives that people turn to during hard economic times. And not only the poor.
"We're seeing more Mercedes and BMWs in Wal-Mart parking lots, and Wal-Mart shoppers are going to dollar stores," said John Bishop, a consultant at GfK Roper, a research outfit, as quoted in Investor's Business Daily.
Sales of Spam and Wonder Bread are spiking, he said. The dollar menu at McDonald's is growing more popular. Wal-Mart is up; Target is down.
For most companies, this phenomenon will last only as long as the recession, or downturn, or whatever it is we're calling it. The restaurant chain Chipotle may be hurting now, but there's no reason to think its traffic won't return when times are good again.
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- LinkedIn doubles revenue, beats growth estimates
- Kodak to stop making digital cameras, frames
- Market cap, schmarket cap, Apple still gets no respect
- Philip Morris Int'l income up nearly 8 percent
- Survey: Small biz plans big hires in 2012
- Freddie Mac: Mortgages inch higher but stay low
- Will the European debt crisis sink Obama's re-election?
- Banks in $25B deal to settle foreclosure abuses
- Joe Coffee: Scaling up without selling your soul
- Greek agreement accomplishes nothing
- 401K plans: New rules make costs clearer
- Are women leaders selling themselves short?
- Ask the Experts: New 401(k) rules
- Mortgage lenders strike a deal
- $25B foreclosure-abuse settlement reached
- Wholesale inventories rose 1 percent in December
- States, Feds to announce new mortgage settlement
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Jack Hanna: Proposed exotic animal law too soft
- NY attorney general ends lawsuit against Intel
- Pharmacyclics rises after posting 2Q profit
- How the video games industry is faring
on Facebook
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- Mo. teen gets life in prison for murder of 9-year-old girl
- "American Idol": Jim Carrey's daughter out, and then disaster
on CBS News






