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Twisted Titan
11th October 2010, 09:55 AM
Midnight grocery runs capture economic desperation



http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Midnight-grocery-runs-capture-apf-1277376086.html?x=0



Once a month, just after midnight, the beeping checkout scanners at a Walmart just off Interstate 95 come alive in a chorus of financial desperation.

Here and at grocery stores across the country, the chimes come just after food stamps and other monthly government benefits drop into the accounts of shoppers who have been rationing things like milk, ground beef and toilet paper and can finally stock up again.

Shoppers mill around the store after 11 p.m., killing time until their accounts are replenished. When midnight strikes, they rush for the checkout counter.

"The kids are sleeping, so we go do what we've gotta do. Money is tight," Martin Young said as he and his wife pushed two carts piled high with ground beef, toilet paper and other items.

The couple said they need food-stamp benefits, which are electronically deposited onto debit cards, because his job as a restaurant server doesn't quite cover expenses for their five children.



"We try to get here between 10:30 and 11 because we know we've got a lot of stuff to get. That way by 12 o'clock we're at the line cashing out and done," he said.

More than a year after the technical end of the Great Recession, millions of Americans still have a hard time stretching their dollars until the first of the month, or even the next payday.

One in seven Americans lives in poverty, and more than 41 million are on food stamps, a record. Last year the figure was about 35 million.

As a result, there are more scenes like the one last week at a 24-hour Kroger in Cincinnati. As the final hours of September ticked down, about five dozen cars were in the parking lot. It's much slower on normal weeknights.

"This here is emergency bread," said Malinda Patterson, 36, who has been without a full-time job since the recession began and had started shopping 20 minutes before midnight. That's when $435 in food stamps kicked in to help feed her six children.

The same night, Shavon Smith and her four young children were loading up on meat, fruit, bread, water, tissues and cereal at Kroger's Food 4 Less store on Chicago's West Side. Those staples had begun running out more than a week earlier.

"Tonight, they were tired and hungry, so I said, 'Let's go ahead and do it now,'" said Smith, who had $600 in food stamps electronically deposited to her electronic debit card at midnight.

"They can go to the fridge and get whatever they want in the beginning of the month, and we have bigger meals," a reprieve from the rationing that is the rule for the rest of the month, she added



Stores have always noted swings in spending around paydays -- a drop-off in buying in the days before shoppers receive paychecks or government subsidies, followed by a spurt of spending once the money is available.

The recession and its aftermath have taken the trend to an extreme. Tight credit is a factor, too. When cash runs out, many can no longer fall back on credit cards to buy what they need.

There is no broad data on the impact of this shopping pattern, known as the paycheck cycle. The timing of government assistance is different from state to state, and when payday falls varies by employer.

But stores have learned how to adapt to the surges, which typically occur on the first and the 15th of the month, when many people get their paychecks. They monitor the pay schedules from big employers in the towns where they operate.

Walmart, Kroger, Kmart and others have worked with their suppliers to stock more gallons of milk and supersized packages of toilet paper and detergent at the beginning of the month. Smaller packages and store brands are given prominence leading up to payday.

Walmart is collaborating with vendors to offer even smaller sizes for under a dollar to win back customers who are heading to dollar stores to buy mini-size laundry soap and other items because they only have a few dollars left until the next payment. Earlier this year, Kmart began pushing $1 items on snack packs and other food items, timed a week before the 15th of each month to help customers stretch their budgets.

"This is the new normal," said Richard Hastings, macro and consumer strategist with Global Hunter Securities. "This is going to be like this for many years to come."

Not counting Social Security, one in six Americans now receives some form of government assistance, including food stamps, Medicaid and extended unemployment benefits.


These government payouts now account for about 20 percent of Americans' total after-tax income, said David Rosenberg, an economist at investment firm Gluskin Sheff. The average over the past half-century is 13 percent.

The high number of people on government assistance is atypical for this stage of an economic recovery. Usually at this point, growth in assistance rolls should be flattening, Rosenberg said.

Americans relying on government benefits are doing their homework to stretch the payments. The vast majority interviewed by The Associated Press as October dawned last week were carefully scrutinizing prices and had a game plan of what to buy where.

In Harlem, shoppers were running back and forth from Target to Costco to compare prices just after 10 a.m., the time most of the stores open, on the first day of the month.

Sandra Bennerson, 66, who is retired and gets Social Security on the first, was in the detergent aisle at Target, explaining to a reporter why Costco had a better deal on Tide. Costco was offering 20 more ounces for the same price.

"Every penny counts," she said.

In Cincinnati, Patterson said she had learned how to budget. She said she hopes the midnight shopping ends soon.

"It's going to be getting colder," Patterson said. "Hopefully, it won't be like this much longer."

Still Barbaro
11th October 2010, 10:05 AM
Thanks for the FYI, TA. Good to get the email, too.

Yes, a lotta folks are hurtin'. I am glad I don't need food stamps, being in Asia, but know that if I return to my USA country, which I do like overall, I might be unemployed, underemployed, and/or on the stamps.
1 out of 6 receiving assistance.

Socailist/welfare/nanny state.

And 5 kids....6 kids...stop popping out more than one, if ya gotta have one.

Different times.

skid
11th October 2010, 11:11 AM
Those people have no pride. If they put as much effort into finding a job or starting a small business as they do shopping or watching TV, they wouldn't need welfare. But since everyone else is "doing it" they might as well take advantage of it.

I'm sure they had to look really hard to find a person to interview that actually had a job and needed the money to supplement their income. Most probably come from a long line of welfare cases...

Silver Rocket Bitches!
11th October 2010, 11:57 AM
"They can go to the fridge and get whatever they want in the beginning of the month, and we have bigger meals," a reprieve from the rationing that is the rule for the rest of the month, she added

Are you fvcking kidding me??

How about learning how to buy food that lasts through the month?

I can just see their grocery receipt now...ice cream, brownies, donuts, etc.

chad
11th October 2010, 12:04 PM
want to get really pissed? read this page:

http://www.gettingfoodstamps.org/rights.htm

look at all of the rights.

StreetsOfGold
11th October 2010, 02:06 PM
want to get really pissed? read this page:

http://www.gettingfoodstamps.org/rights.htm

look at all of the rights.


essesentially, if you want them you can get them.

Cebu_4_2
11th October 2010, 11:22 PM
I get em, and not cause I'm lazy, been fvcked through this system since 2001, ya know, no use spelling it out for you, just go vote fvckwad.

beefsteak
12th October 2010, 07:00 AM
Cebu, didn't know you were having it so rough, and since 2001. Sorry man! That truly is a bummer, dude.

Question I've been wanting to ask and didn't know who to ask that might know. When I read this number of "41 million on food stamps" are the statisticians counting the households and arriving at that 41 million number? Or are they counting the individuals IN a household as part of that 41mil?

I've never applied for nor received foodstamps, so I don't know how the system works, but I've wondered if, say, the mom gets one for her, and then each of the underage kids gets one and she's the caretaker of their food stamps/cards? Like I said, I didn't know who to ask. So, I'm asking you, that is if you know.

Thanks, Cebu. Here's hoping things turn around for you, and real soon!

bonaparte
12th October 2010, 10:00 PM
I can't even begin with what is wrong with this article. I'll take a stab at it though:

1. One of the families was stocking up on "meat". Come on, beans give you protein for a cheaper price.

2. The lady at Target was explaining why "Tide" was a better deal at cosco? Really, I don't even use Tide because genaric laundry soap is a lot cheaper.

3. Hey, if things are that tight, why not buy on sale throughout the month? Oh yeah, they are shopping at midnight because they can't budget.

This is pathetic. My local Kroger store not has WIC approves stickers within, but then again, it does have to cater to that 1 in 6 shopper.

Mouse
13th October 2010, 12:17 AM
I am not sure but I think it's a use it or lose it system, or at least the people on it think that. So they spend it ALL, each month. Many of these people probably don't even need it, but they have the "right". All you need to be is undocumented income (no job, or one job that doesn't pay shit) and no bank account or keep your money out of the bank. Bam - you can eat steaks for $300 a month or whatever.

I thought it was only for foodstuffs though, which most of grocery store is not. Surprised about the detergents and things. I wouldn't expect that to be included.

I considered going on stamps just to help drive this sucker down, but I couldn't get myself to do it. You can even keep your IRA/401k. You could have MILLIONS in your IRA 401k and collect food stamps. What a country!