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510 points bookofjoe | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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parpfish ◴[] No.46182908[source]
an interesting contrast that i think about a lot:

- in rural america, there are dollar stores everywhere that overcharge for small items. people treat them as a necessary evil and begrudgingly shop there.

- in nyc, there are corner bodegas everywhere that overcharge for small items. they are generally seen as beloved neighborhood institutions.

so... what's the difference? corporate owned vs family owned? length of time in community? presence of cute cat at the register?

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thenewwazoo ◴[] No.46182953[source]
Bodegas charge you a little bit more because a real human owner accepts the risk of serving a small community in exchange for being part of that community, and you pay that extra in order to make their existence possible.

Dollar Generals charge you a little bit more because a huge chain has driven out all the competition and you have no choice. The people who work there do not benefit from the extra you pay, and the owners are not members of the community.

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IncreasePosts ◴[] No.46184705[source]
There was no competition in many places dollar stores operate. They moved into those places specifically because they were underserved by larger retailers.
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asdff ◴[] No.46189439[source]
Ehh I disagree. "No competition" yet I bet every home in the area still had groceries in the kitchen before the dollar general opened.
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1. IncreasePosts ◴[] No.46206506[source]
Sure. Because they were driving 25 minutes each way to the nearest Walmart to do their shopping, not 5 minutes down the street.