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From necessity to obsession: how consumption became the engine of modern society

📅 February 10, 2026 ⏱️ 7 min read
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The average American owns 300,000 items. The average European throws away 11 kg of clothing per year. Humanity produced 2.01 billion tons of waste in 2022 — enough to fill 800,000 Olympic swimming pools. But 200 years ago, nobody threw anything away. Clothes were inherited. Items were repaired. Consumption wasn't a lifestyle — it was a necessity. How did we get here?
$100+ tn Global GDP (2023)
100 bn Garments/year (items)
1/3 Food wasted (globally)
1.8 planets Resources we need

📖 Read more: Technology History: From Fire to AI in 300,000 Years

Before mass consumption: the world of “enough”

For thousands of years, the majority of humanity lived in a survival economy. Even in 18th-century Europe, a farmer owned: 2-3 sets of clothes, tools, a bed (often shared), utensils. End of list.

Items were expensive — because they were handmade. A shirt required 500+ hours: planting flax → harvesting → spinning thread → weaving fabric → sewing. That's why clothes were inherited — even swimsuits are mentioned in wills. A pair of shoes? Six months' wages. Patches weren't a sign of poverty — they were the norm.

"Virtue lies not in the possession of wealth but in having little."

— Seneca, “On the Happy Life”

The Industrial Revolution: the birth of “more”

1764

Spinning Jenny: consumption is born

James Hargreaves invented the spinning machine — instead of 1 thread/hour, 8 threads. Within a generation, textiles became 10x cheaper. For the first time, “ordinary” people could buy clothes instead of inheriting them. Mass production had begun.

1851

Crystal Palace Exhibition: consumption as spectacle

The “Great Exhibition” in London: 100,000+ exhibits, 6 million visitors. For the first time, industrial products were presented as spectacle. The beginning of “window shopping” — look, admire, want, buy.

1852

Le Bon Marché: the first department store

Aristide Boucicaut, Paris. Innovations: fixed prices (no haggling), free entry, “browse without obligation,” returns, discounts. Émile Zola called it a “machine of consumer passion” in “Au Bonheur des Dames” (1883).

The American invention: consumption as patriotism

The USA didn't just invent mass production — it invented mass desire. American consumer culture wasn't a “natural evolution” — it was designed.

📖 Read more: The History of Work: Why We Work More but Feel Less

💡 Edward Bernays (1920s)

Freud's nephew, “the father of public relations.” The big idea: you don't sell products — you sell emotions. For Lucky Strike, he convinced women to smoke publicly (1929: “Torches of Freedom” — cigarettes = feminism). For United Fruit, he orchestrated a coup d'état in Guatemala. Consumption was no longer a need — it was identity.

📺 TV advertising (1941+)

First TV ad: Bulova watches, July 1, 1941, $9. By the 1960s: a child saw 20,000 ads/year. By the 2020s: 6,000-10,000/day (digital media). Advertising became invisible — so omnipresent you don't even notice it anymore.

🏡 Postwar “American Dream”

1945-1970: the “golden age.” Suburban house, 2 cars, TV, washing machine, fridge. Victor Lebow (1955): "Our enormously productive economy demands that we make consumption our way of life... that we seek spiritual satisfaction in consumption." It wasn't satire — it was strategy.

Planned obsolescence: the invention of “trash”

The Phoebus lightbulb story — perhaps the most revealing tale of consumerism.

💡 Phoebus Cartel (1924-1939)

The largest lightbulb companies (GE, Osram, Philips) secretly agreed to reduce bulb lifespan from 2,500 hours to 1,000 hours. Companies exceeding 1,000 hours were fined. Deliberately manufacturing an inferior product — for more sales. “Planned obsolescence” officially began.

Alfred Sloan (GM, 1920s) introduced “model years” — changing the design every year so that old ones would look... old. Brooks Stevens (1954) coined the term: planned obsolescence — "the desire to own something a little newer, a little better, a little sooner than necessary."

📱 Planned obsolescence today

iPhone lifecycle (average) 2-3 years
Laptop average 3-5 years
Fast fashion t-shirt 7-10 wears
1950s refrigerator 30+ years
Refrigerator today 7-10 years

Fast fashion: speed is devouring the planet

Fashion once had 2 “seasons” — winter and summer. Zara introduced 52 “micro-seasons” — new clothes every week. Shein? 6,000 new designs per day.

📖 Read more: The History of Speed: Why Everything Must Happen Now

👗 Fast fashion by the numbers

92 million tons of clothing are discarded per year. Fashion accounts for 10% of global CO₂ emissions — more than aviation and shipping combined. Average number of times a garment is worn: 7-10 times before it's thrown away. 85% ends up in landfill.

🌊 Rana Plaza (2013)

A garment factory building in Bangladesh collapsed: 1,134 dead, 2,500+ injured. Workers had warned about cracks. Management forced them to enter. Wages: $38/month. They produced clothing for Primark, Mango, Benetton. T-shirt price: €5. Human cost: invisible.

Amazon, click, deliver: frictionless consumption

Shopping once meant: go to the store, look, touch, think, buy. Today: one click. Amazon understood that every second of “thinking” is a potential lost sale. That's why it invented:

1999

1-Click ordering (Amazon patent)

Buy with one button — no confirmation, no “are you sure?”. Barnes & Noble couldn't copy it — Amazon patented it. 20 years of monopoly on “thoughtless purchasing.”

2005

Amazon Prime: addictive shipping

$79/year → free 2-day shipping. Result: members spend 150% more than non-members. Sunk cost fallacy: “I already paid — I should buy.” 200+ million subscribers (2024).

2015+

Same-day / 30-minute delivery

Amazon is testing drone delivery. But the real “innovation” is psychological: a 2-day wait now feels slow. Habituation raises the bar endlessly.

Black Friday: the ritual

The day after Thanksgiving — a holiday of gratitude for what you have — marks the frenzy for what you don't have. Black Friday 2023 (USA): $9.8 billion in online sales in a single day.

📖 Read more: Titanic: What Really Happened That Night

The Chinese version — Singles' Day (11/11, Alibaba) — breaks every record: $84.5 billion in 24 hours (2022). More than some countries' GDP. Consumption is no longer an activity — it's an event, a spectacle, a sport.

"We buy things we don't need, with money we don't have, to impress people we don't like."

— Dave Ramsey (also attributed to Chuck Palahniuk, “Fight Club”)

The cost: waste, climate, happiness

🗑️ Great Pacific Garbage Patch

80,000 tons of plastic — 3x the size of France — floating between Hawaii and California. 99% non-recyclable. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2016): by 2050, there will be more plastic than fish in the oceans (by weight).

🌡️ Earth Overshoot Day

The day we use up an entire year's worth of resources. 1970: December 29. 2000: September 23. 2024: July 25. Each year we move forward — living in the “red” for 5+ months/year.

😐 Easterlin Paradox

Economist Richard Easterlin (1974): beyond a certain income level (~$75,000/year, Kahneman-Deaton study), happiness does NOT increase. We buy more — we don't become happier. The "hedonic treadmill": each new purchase gives 48 hours of dopamine — then we want something else.

Resistance: minimalism, circular economy, degrowth

The backlash exists — but remains a minority. Joshua Becker ("Becoming Minimalist"): 300,000 items in the home — how many do we actually use? Marie Kondo: “does it spark joy?” The EU: “Right to Repair” (2024) — mandatory repairability for electronics.

France (2020) banned the destruction of unsold clothing — the first country in the world. The Netherlands is experimenting with “doughnut economics” (Kate Raworth): growth that respects planetary boundaries. But the reality: Shein is worth $66 billion and growing.

Consumption started as liberation — for the first time, “ordinary” people could own things. But somewhere along the way, things began to own us. And the real question isn't “why do we buy” — but what are we trying to fill.

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consumption consumerism advertising planned obsolescence fast fashion consumer psychology industrial revolution minimalism