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Guess what, all is NOT well in Model Railroad Land. Not in N, not in HO, not in O, not in any. Matter of fact it's pretty much the same in most if not all hobbies. Is it a conspiracy? Well no, unless you want to count the Chinese Government's decision to more closely watch who they give the low or no cost loans too. The reality is that over the last few years, more and more people are being asked to work harder for the same or less money. When you look at the pitiful increase in wages people have had over the last few years and the sizable increase in costs in the last year or so, you see the disposable income shrinking. Now I know that nobody on this forum suffers from those symptoms because we all make great money and besides, we all keep getting told that people spend more on their hobby in a recession. NOT ANYMORE. While we may not think the macro-issues affect us or shouldn't affect the hobby, the reality is they very much do. When people have to pay more to put gas in their cars, more for food, more for insurance, more for kids school supplies, more for vacation, it leaves alot less for hobby's and that keeps newbies out of the hobby. Without them the pool of existing model railroaders shrinks, the less people to buy the less gets sold, the less get's sold, the less get's produced.
I'm just starting to experiment with n scale model trains again after many years. The recession has been hard on everything and everybody. I've been modelling in large scale for the last five years and have heard doom and gloom with some suppliers in those scales. Some big manufacturers and some retailers have cut back and St. Aubin's closed their doors in April and manufacturers seem to be selling directly.What changes have you all seen in N scale suppliers?What do you folks see as the future in N scale modeling?
Well, it's certainly easy enough to state the obvious; a major recession such as the one we're experiencing now will affect all hobbies. To suggest, however, that it affects some scales more than others, as has been done in this thread, is just a tad silly. As we move out of the recession (unless we're in it for good, which is doubtful), we'll start seeing more positive signs in N as well as all of the other scales. The economy pretty much creates a level playing field; or, to adopt another metaphor, all of the scales will rise when the tide comes in.