Linda Nazareth: Are Cupcakes an Economic Indicator?
Today’s guest speaker blog comes from Economist, Author and Broadcaster Linda Nazareth. Her latest book, Economorphics is a guidebook to economic change and the ways you can make them work for you.
Are Cupcakes an economic indicator? Maybe I am reading too much into it, but I was taken aback when I heard that cupcake chain Crumbs is closing shop. In case you are not a big cupcake aficionado, Crumbs is (or rather was) the largest cup-cakery in the United States. Its specialty was over-size treats laden with candy which it sold from 65 stores in 12 sugar-loving U.S. states. At the time the company went public, in 2011, there were only 34 stores in the chain, but the company had plans to expand to 200 by this year. The fact that the cupcake craze was in full swing in 2011 does not surprise me. That year, the U.S. was technically a couple of years out of recession but still in the depths of it. Housing prices were spiralling downwards, employment was down over 12 million from its previous high and Walmart was making plans to bring back layaway prices for Christmas toys (a practice that had not been widely used since the Brady Bunch was in its first-run). Spirits were low and people were eager for some sweetness and fun. At $4.50 a shot, a fancy cupcake was an indulgence but accessible. So what does it mean that Crumbs is crumbing in the face of harder times? Maybe nothing. It could simply be a matter of bad management, or over-expansion or any of a dozen things. I would argue, however, that the issues facing the cupcake business illustrate a couple of what I call ‘Economorphic’ trends. That is, they are a live illustration of some of the economic and demographic forces that are morphing the world we have into a different one.Here are the two I see most clearly:
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The Demographic Window is Closing
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The Commodity Squeeze is On