Global Supply Chain Crisis 2021: Megathread - A cozy thread for watching the supply chain fall apart just in time for the holidays

Should the title be re-worded to expand the scope of the thread?

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And buy stuff you would actually eat.
This is the number 1 rule of prepping people struggle with. You are NEVER going to want to eat that survival bucket in your basement full of freeze-dried peas. ESPECIALLY NOT in a crisis situation where you want nothing more than comfort foods.

Food prep in a nutshell:
- Get a foodsaver. GET BAGS.
- Get a chest freezer. Get a way to power it if the grid goes down.
- Buy only bulk beef/pork loins or whole chickens. Divide up and freeze.
- Examine your purchases when you are picking things up. Out of Ketchup? Look at the expiration date in the store. It's good to 2023 and you use 4 pints a year? Buy eight.

None of this is about doomerism. Do you know how amazing it is to run out of foil while cooking and be able to run to your garage and grab a roll? It's incredibly freeing. If I feel like it I can bbq a prime brisket tomorrow that I paid $4 a lb for. These are benefits that payoff forever, not just if the SHTF.
 
- Examine your purchases when you are picking things up. Out of Ketchup? Look at the expiration date in the store. It's good to 2023 and you use 4 pints a year? Buy eight.
For me, OCD really helps here. For some reason, I always feel the urge to buy things in pairs

"Why get one box of pasta when I could get two? If I manage to ruin the recipe, I'll have a spare and can try again!" (usually what actually happens is everything turns out fine and I just go twice as long before I need more pasta).

It doesn't work out so well for things like milk where there's no sense in getting more than I can consume, and I've learned to accept that I should not purchase those items in pairs for a backup.

It works out great if I want something like jello and can't choose between two flavors - "Well I was going to buy two anyways, I'll just make it a mismatched pair".

Just buying a little extra and slowly accumulating things doesn't have to be complicated, even if you are bad at math and can't calculate what you need in a year. Of course having a plan is better, but if anyone needs to start small...
 
No, but my stove runs on bottled LPG, which what barbecues also use.

I do get up before dawn on the weekends to fire up my smoker, however.
The main purpose of smoking meat is to have an excuse to sit in a lawn chair for hours, fiddling with the firebox.

If a smoker runs itself, you can be called into other duties.

This is the real problem with gas-fired smokers.
 

America Is Running Out of Everything​

The global supply chain is slowing down at the very moment when Americans are demanding that it go into overdrive.
By Derek Thompson

Is it just me, or does it feel like America is running out of everything?

I visited CVS last week to pick up some at-home COVID-19 tests. They’d been sold out for a week, an employee told me. So I asked about paper towels. “We’re out of those too,” he said. “Try Walgreens.” I drove to a Walgreens that had paper towels. But when I asked a pharmacist to fill some very common prescriptions, he told me the store had run out. “Try the Target up the road,” he suggested. Target’s pharmacy had the meds, but its front area was alarmingly barren, like the canned-food section of a grocery store one hour before a hurricane makes landfall.

This is the economy now. One-hour errands are now multi-hour odysseys. Next-day deliveries are becoming day-after-next deliveries. That car part you need? It’ll take an extra week, sorry. The book you were looking for? Come back in November. The baby crib you bought? Make it December. Eyeing a new home-improvement job that requires several construction workers? Haha, pray for 2022.

The U.S. economy isn’t yet experiencing a downturn akin to the 1970s period of stagflation. This is something different, and quite strange. Americans are settling into a new phase of the pandemic economy, in which GDP is growing but we’re also suffering from a dearth of a shocking array of things—test kits, car parts, semiconductors, ships, shipping containers, workers. This is the Everything Shortage.

The Everything Shortage is not the result of one big bottleneck in, say, Vietnamese factories or the American trucking industry. We are running low on supplies of all kinds due to a veritable hydra of bottlenecks.

The coronavirus pandemic has snarled global supply chains in several ways. Pandemic checks sent hundreds of billions of dollars to cabin-fevered Americans during a fallow period in the service sector. A lot of that cash has flowed to hard goods, especially home goods such as furniture and home-improvement materials. Many of these materials have to be imported from or travel through East Asia. But that region is dealing with the Delta variant, which has been considerably more deadly than previous iterations of the virus. Delta has caused several shutdowns at semiconductor factories across Asia just as demand for cars and electronics has started to pick up. As a result, these stops along the supply chain are slowing down at the very moment when Americans are demanding that they work in overdrive.

The most dramatic expression of this snarl is the purgatory of loaded cargo containers stacked on ships bobbing off the coast of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Just as a normal traffic jam consists of too many drivers trying to use too few lanes, the traffic jam at California ports has been exacerbated by extravagant consumer demand slamming into a shortage of trucks, truckers, and port workers. Because ships can’t be unloaded, not enough empty containers are in transit to carry all of the stuff that consumers are trying to buy. So the world is getting a lesson in Econ 101: High demand plus limited supply equals prices spiraling to the moon. Before the pandemic, reserving a container that holds roughly 35,000 books cost $2,500. Now it costs $25,000.

The container situation is even weirder than it looks. With demand surging in the United States, shipping a parcel from Shanghai to Los Angeles is currently six times more expensive than shipping one from L.A. to Shanghai. J.P. Morgan’s Michael Cembalest wrote that this has created strong incentives for container owners to ship containers to China—even if they are mostly empty—to expedite the packing and shipping of freights in Shanghai to travel east. But when containers leave Los Angeles and Long Beach empty, American-made goods that were supposed to be sent across the Pacific Ocean end up sitting around in railcars parked at West Coast ports. Since the packed railcars can’t unload their goods, they can’t go back and collect more stuff from filled warehouses in the American interior.

And what about the truckers who are needed to drive materials between warehouses, ports, stores, and houses? They’re dealing with a multidimensional shortage too. Supply-chain woes have backed up orders for parts, such as resin for roof caps and vinyl for seats. But there’s also a crucial lack of people to actually drive the rigs. The Minnesota Trucking Association estimates that the country has a shortage of about 60,000 drivers, due to longtime recruitment issues, early retirements, and COVID-canceled driving-school classes.

In short, supply chains depend on containers, ports, railroads, warehouses, and trucks. Every stage of this international assembly line is breaking down in its own unique way. When the global supply chain works, it’s like a beautifully invisible system of dominoes clicking forward. Today’s omnishambles is a reminder that dominoes can fall backwards too.

And then there’s the labor market. In the U.S., job openings have hit record highs in restaurants, hotels, and other leisure and hospitality sectors. But companies are struggling to fill these roles—and to keep factories and some other businesses operating at full capacity when Delta infections roll through.

You can see these problems from a variety of angles. From workers’ perspective, unemployment insurance and several rounds of stimulus have allowed laid-off workers to be picky about jobs, instead of desperately lunging for the first paycheck available. That doesn’t sound like such a bad thing. But from many employers’ perspective, government programs have exacerbated a terrible labor shortage. Staffing up a business has become difficult. The result, from consumers’ perspective, is more of the same Everything Shortage. Since finding, hiring, and training hundreds of thousands of people in new roles at the same time is hard during a pandemic, we should all expect a bit of slowness across the service sector for a while—a bit more time for that cappuccino, a bit longer of a wait for that appetizer, a bit of confusion at the convenience store when you ask where the nail-polish remover is and the new employee who had to Zoom in for her training program needs a moment to remember the aisle numbers.

Finally, as if those slowdowns weren’t enough, there’s the mail. As of this month, the U.S. Postal Service is reducing its use of air transportation to save money. The USPS estimates that deliveries outside your local area will likely be delayed by one or two days. But as we’ve seen, relying on rail and truck means leaning on systems that are dealing with their own mess.

This has not yet added up to a recession. But it portends a massively frustrating holiday-shopping period, especially for households with a habit of buying presents at the last minute. “I’ve been doing this for 43 years and never seen it this bad,” Isaac Larian, the founder and CEO of the toy maker MGA Entertainment, told Bloomberg. “Everything that can go wrong is going wrong at the same time.” USPS has already announced price hikes for the winter holidays. To avoid paying those surcharges and suffering the yuletide wrath of disappointed children, the recommended course of action is clear: If you want it by December 25, start placing those orders soon. Everyone complains when stores start playing carols and advertising holiday sales in October. This year, “Christmas creep” is your best shopping strategy. Either that, or prepare the kids to celebrate Christmas morning some time in January.

How will the everything shortage be resolved? One possibility is that Americans adopt a sustainable, ascetic, and homespun lifestyle that reduces our dependency on goods that activate the global supply chain. If you can seriously envision such a world, I envy your gift of imagination.

The best solution to the Everything Shortage is to have a policy to make more of just about everything. Containers, which carry more than 90 percent of the world’s traded goods, are overwhelmingly manufactured in China. Why doesn’t America make more? Car parts, semiconductors, and home goods have been offshored, making the U.S. sorely reliant on overseas factories. Why can’t America make more? At-home COVID-19 tests, which could illuminate household infections and prevent community spread, were only just authorized by the FDA, almost two years into this pandemic. Why hasn’t America made more?

For decades, many U.S. companies moved manufacturing overseas, taking advantage of cheaper labor and cheaper materials across the oceans. In normal times, America benefits from global trade, and the price of offshoring is borne by the unlucky few in deindustrialized regions. But the pandemic and the supply-chain breakdowns are a reminder that the decline of manufacturing can be felt more broadly during a crisis when we run out of, well, damn near everything. That’s why Joe Biden's Build Back Better plan includes billions of dollars to reshore manufacturing, invest in basic research, and beef up domestic supply chains.

Our dearth of manufactured parts and containers is part of a broader crisis of manufactured scarcity in America. A protectionist and anti-growth instinct runs through government, yielding not only a flat-footed CDC and a tardy FDA but also sharp restrictions on housing construction, immigration, and the licensing of new professionals and tradespeople. Focusing on the redistribution of income and goods is natural for today’s progressives, who tend to emphasize the virtue of equality. One lesson of the Everything Shortage is: You cannot redistribute what isn’t created in the first place. The best equality agenda begins with an abundance agenda.

Today’s crisis is an opportunity to emphasize a new philosophy of what The New York Times’ Ezra Klein calls “supply-side progressivism,” which sees value in this across-the-board abundance. This approach might start by prioritizing policies that reduce the cost of housing and health care, and reshoring the production of materials that we deem essential to national security during a pandemic or an unrelated supply-chain calamity. Decades from now, we might look at the legacy of the pandemic, and see that it took a global crisis of choke points to teach us that real progress begins by removing the choke points at home.
 
For me, OCD really helps here. For some reason, I always feel the urge to buy things in pairs

"Why get one box of pasta when I could get two? If I manage to ruin the recipe, I'll have a spare and can try again!" (usually what actually happens is everything turns out fine and I just go twice as long before I need more pasta).

It doesn't work out so well for things like milk where there's no sense in getting more than I can consume, and I've learned to accept that I should not purchase those items in pairs for a backup.

It works out great if I want something like jello and can't choose between two flavors - "Well I was going to buy two anyways, I'll just make it a mismatched pair".

Just buying a little extra and slowly accumulating things doesn't have to be complicated, even if you are bad at math and can't calculate what you need in a year. Of course having a plan is better, but if anyone needs to start small...
Whoa, i do that too!
 
I had everything I needed, except for luxuries that could last. Specifically, coca cola, snack foods, etc. It turns out, when the panic buying was happening those things were still on the shelves. Toilet paper? Gone. Paper towels? Gone. Preparation H? Still there, which was astounding to me.

There was a few Studys done on this during the cold war, and I've read a few anecdotal cases where this has happened.
People are so conditioned to accept that some things will never be out of stock they overlook them when in a panic because they have always been there so why wont they be there tomorrow so when panic buying or scavenging / looting those things tend to get forgotten and left behind for a while or are the last thing left on the shelf with the exception of Toilet paper as that's one thing we have all run out of at some point in our lives and have a personal bad experience with so it get's remembered and thus sells out faster.

Luxury items are the one's that people tend to focus on for various psycological and social reasons, the main seems to be that they don't want to run out of a desirable object that they feel loans them status (seriously despite being almost identical Coke and Pepsi have differing levels of Social Status attached to them, you can sort of tell what a persons concerned with when given a choice of the two) it also doesn't help that a lot of people become addicted to certain brads of junk food but that's more of a newer development. In long term shortage situations or catastrophic events like Civil war or International conflict etc the man with luxuries has options during the Bosnian civil war a Nub of lipstick one that would have normally been thrown out would buy you a full MRE pack, a 6 Pack of Coke you Sir are king etc.

The whole situation around food amazes me and astounds me in general by how complex our diets are and how much people have mentally and physically seperated themselfs from one of there most fundamental needs and how seasonal they are without an absurdly huge effort.
The sooner people wake upto that, and it starts to change the better.
 
What is insane, however, is how in this clown world, it is apparently cheaper to ship your raw material from across the ocean and then ship the finished goods back, rather than manufacturing it on the spot. But I blame that more on how globalism has utterly distorted the supply and demand of local economies.
This was something the British Empire had been doing with their colonies including the 13 colonies as means to control them. What we're seeing now is the modern iteration of it except done by globalist corporations.
 
tim did another video but late talking normy about ship issue that was talked about weeks ago.
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All can't wait for another great reset article.
 
I can't quote the post (REEEEEE NULL FIIIIIIXXX...I kid)

But in response to the "AMERICA IS RUNNING OUT OF EVERYTHING" Yeah no shit that is what happens when a supply chain disruption occurs and you don't fucking make anything.

Maybe we should start making things again.
 
what can we expect from the fuel crisis? i know europe and asia are bracing for high costs and a very cold winter, but what about america? we export a lot of oil but does that mean the exports can be distributed domestically if the need arises?
 
what can we expect from the fuel crisis? i know europe and asia are bracing for high costs and a very cold winter, but what about america? we export a lot of oil but does that mean the exports can be distributed domestically if the need arises?
It depends on whether the US runs on domestic oil, or imports. If you are running solely on domestic oil, it shouldn't be a huge issue, I'm sure prices will rise, because the companies will use the excuse of "global crisis" to shafts the little guy if they can get away with it.
If you run mostly on imported oil though, I can see two contradictory issues, one is that oil is exported (at least to Europe and Asia) on ships. If the ports are backed up, the oil can't make it out on time. This might lead to the oil companies deciding that it's better to distribute their products in the USA to avoid shipping delays and associated costs.
The other is that the exports of oil are a contractual obligation. A lot of people say things like "we should just not export any oil", but the companies that control the oil would have a contract that says "X barrels per month for X years", so they can't turn around and say "sorry, gas prices are too high at home" without getting fucked on by whoever they're obligated to supply.
Add to this the fact that oil doesn't deteriorate with storage (at least as far as I know), and oil is one of the biggest industries in the world, so companies can probably afford to hunker down and wait for the port system to unfuck itself, and then continue shipping the oil.
 
It depends on whether the US runs on domestic oil, or imports. If you are running solely on domestic oil, it shouldn't be a huge issue, I'm sure prices will rise, because the companies will use the excuse of "global crisis" to shafts the little guy if they can get away with it.
If you run mostly on imported oil though, I can see two contradictory issues, one is that oil is exported (at least to Europe and Asia) on ships. If the ports are backed up, the oil can't make it out on time. This might lead to the oil companies deciding that it's better to distribute their products in the USA to avoid shipping delays and associated costs.
The other is that the exports of oil are a contractual obligation. A lot of people say things like "we should just not export any oil", but the companies that control the oil would have a contract that says "X barrels per month for X years", so they can't turn around and say "sorry, gas prices are too high at home" without getting fucked on by whoever they're obligated to supply.
Add to this the fact that oil doesn't deteriorate with storage (at least as far as I know), and oil is one of the biggest industries in the world, so companies can probably afford to hunker down and wait for the port system to unfuck itself, and then continue shipping the oil.
thats good news for me i guess, its get cold in the winter but not so much so we'll freeze to death.

the wsj has a headline saying shipping companies are abandoning boats and crew because theyre broke. so sucks for the rest of the world.
 
Glad I bought such a big stash of pasta and rice and whanot last year. Thing is, it's just about past its sell by date now. I'll get through it no trouble. They always give the sell by date as earlier than when these dried goods can be eaten by. I ate a year old pack of noodles the other week as proof of concept. Wasn't great. But it filled a hole and didn't make me ill.

I don't know what the answer is really unless you have multi-year long stash and somewhere you can protect it, cook it. I've been through this scenario a million times (in my head) and it's really not so simple. Still, it's better to be prepared and there is a lot you can do. Lots of good advice given in this thread. Don't have much more to add. Maybe, just get in there now before Xmas goes crazy and you won't get a delivery at all. Buy as much as you can eat, a year or two down the line. Don't be worried about pasta being six months out of date. Tinned goods keep for a good while past the date too, but you don't want to push it too far. If nothing else, they make for a handy weapon.

Bought some beers tonight after a little abstinence. Didn't realise how fucking raped the shelves were. Wine too. Fuck me, it's not a good time to be an alky. Missing all kinds of random shit on the shelves. What was there last week is missing this week, vice versa. Same old fuckeries going on with frozen stuff. Chips! Now, they aren't very nice, and they aren't very nutritious, but they fill another one of those holes when you are having a night off from cooking great food. I even prefer the cheaper ones they do because they are thinner and cook a bit easier and crisper in my little oven.

Never mind, I just made a comment to the guy I know behind the counter. He's a gamer. We chat shit about GFX cards and whatnot when no one is looking. I made a sarcy comment, and he corrected me. He told me it's not so much the drivers to deliver the goods, though that is quite a bit of the problem, it's more the fuckers stacking the shelves to get the goods on to the lorry. A bit like what @Sped Xing talked about before if I'm not mistaken: it's not just the guys driving the trucks, it's the guys loading the trucks - if you got no one to load, then...

They had guys to load, but here was the thing, he told me they kept loading the same fucking stuff. And there wasn't enough of them to load all the other stuff. I meant to question him further, but people came in and I had to shoot.

Anyway, the problem is not so much lorry drivers, it's guys loading the vans. They have stuff in the depot/warehouse, but they don't have enough people to load it properly. The ones they do have just keep loading the same stuff for some reason. I'll try to find out why. Maybe it's lower on the shelf. LOL.

If things are this bad now, yeah, they will be worse by Xmas. Don't care personally, I'll get by. Got no kids to nag me for shit. Folks so old they are thankful for what they get. And I got my own Xmas pressy to myelf all worked out and nearly payed for.

Tbh, not really sure what the guy's argument was. It seemed a bit weird to me. Yeah, they got most of the stuff, lorry/van drivers are in short supply but not the bottleneck. But just not enough stuff in the warehouse to distribute it all, and those that are there, just keep sending more of what they got, rather than evening out the distribution of things they don't have.

Fuck it, I'm nearly wankered and it's only.. shit, it's the next day. Ok, I'm fairly wankered. Another post I probably shouldn't post but fuck it. I love you fam.

If anyone can explain this, I'm all ears.
 
Glad I bought such a big stash of pasta and rice and whanot last year. Thing is, it's just about past its sell by date now. I'll get through it no trouble. They always give the sell by date as earlier than when these dried goods can be eaten by. I ate a year old pack of noodles the other week as proof of concept. Wasn't great. But it filled a hole and didn't make me ill.

I don't know what the answer is really unless you have multi-year long stash and somewhere you can protect it, cook it. I've been through this scenario a million times (in my head) and it's really not so simple. Still, it's better to be prepared and there is a lot you can do. Lots of good advice given in this thread. Don't have much more to add. Maybe, just get in there now before Xmas goes crazy and you won't get a delivery at all. Buy as much as you can eat, a year or two down the line. Don't be worried about pasta being six months out of date. Tinned goods keep for a good while past the date too, but you don't want to push it too far. If nothing else, they make for a handy weapon.

Bought some beers tonight after a little abstinence. Didn't realise how fucking raped the shelves were. Wine too. Fuck me, it's not a good time to be an alky. Missing all kinds of random shit on the shelves. What was there last week is missing this week, vice versa. Same old fuckeries going on with frozen stuff. Chips! Now, they aren't very nice, and they aren't very nutritious, but they fill another one of those holes when you are having a night off from cooking great food. I even prefer the cheaper ones they do because they are thinner and cook a bit easier and crisper in my little oven.

Never mind, I just made a comment to the guy I know behind the counter. He's a gamer. We chat shit about GFX cards and whatnot when no one is looking. I made a sarcy comment, and he corrected me. He told me it's not so much the drivers to deliver the goods, though that is quite a bit of the problem, it's more the fuckers stacking the shelves to get the goods on to the lorry. A bit like what @Sped Xing talked about before if I'm not mistaken: it's not just the guys driving the trucks, it's the guys loading the trucks - if you got no one to load, then...

They had guys to load, but here was the thing, he told me they kept loading the same fucking stuff. And there wasn't enough of them to load all the other stuff. I meant to question him further, but people came in and I had to shoot.

Anyway, the problem is not so much lorry drivers, it's guys loading the vans. They have stuff in the depot/warehouse, but they don't have enough people to load it properly. The ones they do have just keep loading the same stuff for some reason. I'll try to find out why. Maybe it's lower on the shelf. LOL.

If things are this bad now, yeah, they will be worse by Xmas. Don't care personally, I'll get by. Got no kids to nag me for shit. Folks so old they are thankful for what they get. And I got my own Xmas pressy to myelf all worked out and nearly payed for.

Tbh, not really sure what the guy's argument was. It seemed a bit weird to me. Yeah, they got most of the stuff, lorry/van drivers are in short supply but not the bottleneck. But just not enough stuff in the warehouse to distribute it all, and those that are there, just keep sending more of what they got, rather than evening out the distribution of things they don't have.

Fuck it, I'm nearly wankered and it's only.. shit, it's the next day. Ok, I'm fairly wankered. Another post I probably shouldn't post but fuck it. I love you fam.

If anyone can explain this, I'm all ears.
I think it's a fuckup at every level.

The West Out-sourced all the manufacturing it could to China and places like that, meaning we have to bring products from across the world, and they are produced in places run by The Chink Verson of Chris Chan
Then we set up the "Just in Time" TM Warehouse System so that there is no "Extra Product" we only keep as much as we need for that day
Then you cut back as much as possible on staffing, after all you will be getting "Less" product in so you only need so many workers.

Now Corona-Chan appears and slaps the world across the face.

In normal times not much would have happened outside of a few disruptions because the "Just in Time" bullshit can't handle disruptions very well..but once The Chinks sort themselves out. However The Administrative Complex wanted ORANGE MAN out because they were absolutely butthurt about him defeating QWUEEEEEN HILLARY and threatening to drain the swamp and make them do actual jobs instead of stealing money from people to fund an endless maze of Administrative Bureaucracies.

So they got their Buddy Faucci to scream "THIS IS THE WORST THING EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" promising to hide the fact that he was Embezzling money by sending money to a cut rate Slant Eye Lab that wouldn't notice if he and his buddies pocketed half the money that was being sent over, so they scared the half of the Country that also hated Orange Man into hiding for 2 years, as well as giving Tyrants like the people in charge of Australia the excuse to clamp down on the sheep.

So 2 years later..you have half the Populace so terrorized by the idea of getting the Rona that they are demanding that anyone who doesn't get the Jab, mask up and basically wear a bio-suit 24/7 get fired, halving the work-force. (more than because a good amount of the Terrorized populace has hold up in their house) so nobody is there to fill all the extra work that is required to catch back up and short cuts can't be taken because Big Pharma has found a Cash Cow and they won't let go, and Big Pharma makes Big Oil look like Kenny from South Park.

Xi got so asshurt over being blamed as the source of all of this that he is going full Lolcow and banning Coal from Australia and causing his own country to have massive energy issues, and a President of the Free world that is so senile he doesn't know where he is half the time, and the endless Bureaucrats who thought that they "REALLY RAN THINGS" have no idea how to actually solve problems. so there is nobody to kick shit back into order.

So really, this was a perfect storm of a Group of people who are unable to solve problems, Big Business trying to "CUT COSTS" and following the leader with some stupid Fad..and The Propoganda arm of the Administrative Doing to good of a job of completely terrorizing half the world, and Pissing off the other half to the point where they said "GO FUCK YOURSELF" combined with basic Power Hunger and Greed.
 
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