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The obsession with cheapness is not confined to the US as it's also widespread in the UK.It's interesting that USA generally values cheap, throwaway shoes/products that follow influencer trends, while some other countries and demographic groups value quality. Materialism pervades USA society today, something else that separates the USA from Canada. This pursuit of "cheap" leaves the USA particularly vulnerable to tariffs where all products of one type (shoes) are manufactured in one country (China).
This has become possible due to Temu and similar apps which have become ubiquitous on social media, essentially a shop window direct to Chinese manufacturers. The UK now has a real problem with teenagers and young women in particular ordering enormous "hauls" of cheap throwaway fashion (dresses for £5, t-shirts for £1).
Outfits are worn once for a night out or for a post on Tiktok or Insta - and then just thrown away. The clothing and other apparel is so shoddily made from such cheap and shoddy materials that charity shops won't touch it - after all, what can they charge for a t-shirt which cost £1 in the first place? So almost all of it goes straight to landfill.
And the supply chain is incredibly murky in terms of modern slavery.