My mom’s 50 year old magnifier from the CCCP era. The star is a state quality mark of the USSR which works as a certification of quality.
Submitted by daanikp t3_zqoec7 in BuyItForLife
Reply to comment by DiaMat2040 in My mom’s 50 year old magnifier from the CCCP era. The star is a state quality mark of the USSR which works as a certification of quality. by daanikp
General build quality in the USSR was terrible.
Here's an article with a lot of academic sources discussing the overall low quality of Soviet consumer goods: https://nintil.com/the-soviet-union-durable-goods/
If something was for military or government use, it was generally pretty good. Otherwise, you got whatever crap the local factory spat out, because there was no competition.
I find that in the past this was true, but many products I find today are made very very cheaply, even good quality brands I have bought before are breaking. It feels like we ended up with the same result just with more steps and more waste. So I am thinking maybe there needs to be some oversight in quality of consumer goods again to decrease waste and increase durability.
Sure, but then everything you want to buy will be 2-3x more costly.
You can find long-lasting stuff without issue. It just costs a lot more. Durability costs money.
I wouldn’t say “without issue.” You have to hack your way through mounds of junk and a high price is no guarantee of quality.
Not really. You either buy commercial or you can find which particular brands are fine.
High price doesn't necessarily mean high quality, but low price is a guarantee of low quality.
Surely you have read this sub enough to know that’s not true.
Yes, it is.
There's just a lot of people here who don't know what they are talking about pretending to be experts.
It's not like consumer goods manufacturers are making insane margins. Single digit operating profit is pretty normal in that industry.
The question is just "do consumers want to pay more for quality," and the answer is virtually always "not really."
The bulletproof appliances at your grandparents' house cost a FORTUNE back then compared to what people earned: https://www.aei.org/carpe-diem/appliance-shopping-1959-vs-2012/
The cost of a washer/dryer set in 1959 represented 181.8 hours of work at the average hourly wage.
A washer/dryer set in 2012 represented 31 hours of work at the average hourly wage.
The newer model might only last 5-10 years instead of a lifetime. But businesses realized that that's fine for most consumers. Maybe even preferable - "I'll move before then; I don't want to pay extra so the next owner doesn't have to buy a washer and dryer."
Not because there was no competition. There’s plenty of competition for the crap we are surrounded by today, always 50 different brands of everything.
I'm talking about USSR products. In the USSR, there was genuinely no competition. No branding. Literally whatever your local factory churned out.
USA: Tyson, Purdue, oscar meyer, store brand chicken, etc. available nationwide
I meant the lack of competition wasn’t the problem. It was more about prioritizing resources.
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