[Durham INC] Holiday gifts? Think Local First...

Barry Ragin bragin at nc.rr.com
Sat Dec 5 14:55:15 EST 2009


Here's another thought. When you buy online, for example, one of the 
benefits you may think you're reaping is, "no sales tax." That 70 bucks 
you save may seem like a lot when you're plunking down a thousand 
dollars on a new computer.

But that's the money that the city and county use to fund services like 
police, street maintenance, trash pickup, etc. Yeah, you're supposed to 
fill in the space on your state tax return every year and pay the sales 
taxes on your online or out-of-state purchases, but how many of us 
actually do that?

So you can buy all your stuff online at Amazon.

Just don't complain about how long it takes to get that pothole on your 
block repaired.

Barry Ragin

John Schelp wrote:
> ... The motto of the shop local movement isn't "Shop Local Only." 
>
> It's "Shop Local First." And what it really means is "Think Local First" -- take a moment before you buy something and ask yourself if there's a local source of whatever it is you are looking for. 
>
> Thinking local first also means giving some thought to the benefits that flow from shopping local. Independent businesses make for a more vibrant and varied local culture. A greater sense of community. And they help keep a lot more of our money at work here in our hometown. 
>
> Why? Because a lot more of the money you spend at a locally owned business stays (and re-circulates) in our local community. Take my business for example. All of our employees live here. Our back office is in the back of the store, not in New York or Shanghai. We buy almost all of our supplies locally. Most of the taxes we pay stay in Durham and North Carolina. We bank locally. And we don't send dividend checks or inflated CEO salaries off to another state, or another country. 
>
> A recent study in Grand Rapids, Mich., found that a modest change in consumer behavior -- a mere 10 percent shift in market share to independent businesses from chain stores -- would result in 1,600 new jobs, $53 million in wages, and a $137 million economic impact to that area. If this 10 percent shift were to happen in Durham, (a smaller city than Grand Rapids), the impact would be something like 800 jobs, $20 million in annual wages, and $60 million a year in increased economic activity. 
>
> There's no escaping the fact that we live in a global economy. And for a lot of reasons the global end of things has been running rampant lately, driving local business to the brink. Some of this has to do with efficiencies, but a lot of it also has to do with access to capital, exchange rates, and things like the financial backing needed to sign a lease at most shopping malls. 
>
> But we also live in a very specific (and I think very remarkable) place. And supporting a little local balance to the global giants can only be a good thing for this place we call home -- and, really, for the global economy as well. 
>
> (Excerpt from Column: Buying local has a big impact, by Tom Campbell, co-owner of The Regulator Bookshop, Herald-Sun, 27 Jan 2009)
>
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