The Mayo Clinic describes a
hoarder as a person who survives in cluttered living spaces, moves items from
one pile to another without the ability to throw anything away, acquires
seemingly useless items, empty boxes, wrappers, trash, newspapers, magazines,
bits of paper, discarded old toys, ratty clothes, household supplies, and spoiled
food. Such a hoarder would buy, search for, and store items of little to no
value.
It is alleged that there are
more males than females who exhibit such a disorder and 2-6% of the population
exhibits hoarding disorders. Causes of hoarding may include heredity, brain
damage, serotonin issues, and other medical conditions.
The primary fears of the disposophobic
are losing things and disposing of useless personal possessions.
Merriam Webster dictionary
defines hoarding as a psychological compulsion to continually accumulate a variety
of items often considered worthless by others coupled with an inability to
discard the items without great distress. Such distress affects the hoarder’s
health, career, and relationships with family members and others.
A person with dementia is
more likely to hoard because of the anxiety that he/she might lose something.
At the same time, piles of belongings may give them comfort. Alzheimer’s
patients often hide the things they hoard, forget where they put them, and then
accuse family or imaginary people of having taken them – food, clothing, money,
and other possessions they deem valuable.
In our society, food
hoarding occurs in children for reasons of neglect, deprivation, chaotic or
disrupted home environments, difficulties in schools, disordered eating, and
other psychological problems. Most adults hoard and hide food due to an eating
disorder.
Adults who survived food
deprivation under communist regimes where food shortages and famine were
common, tended to hoard food to divide it among loved ones to make sure they had
something to eat even during hard times when pantry and store shelves were bare,
and food could not be bought or found. The intent was to avoid starvation.
Throughout history, when governments have intervened in the
smooth operation of free markets based on supply and demand, the results have
been disastrous, not the least of which are hoarding and the emergence of black
markets. I am not talking about the psychological problems of hoarding personal
items when people have a hard time getting rid of anything they own, I am
talking about reality-based hoarding, the result of fear of shortage or
imminent societal collapse.
Natural disasters such as announced hurricanes or tornadoes
often compel people to buy excessive food, bottled water, gasoline, a
generator, milk, but especially toilet paper. Civil unrest or fear of disease
such as this corona pandemic can also force people to hoard food and other
necessities, including toilet paper. In a category of its own are the preppers
who are ready for any end of the world, political holocaust unrest scenario.
They purchase food with the shelf life of 25 years or more and build
shelters/bunkers underground, in caves, or decommissioned bunkers.
Hoarding goods in excess of immediate need is caused by
artificial scarcity. Artificial scarcity can be caused by unnecessary
government intervention that scares people into hoarding behavior, i.e., panic
driven by government forcing the closure of businesses and locking down the
working population which can no longer produce necessary goods for society to
function properly. Best example was the Covid-19 interference in the market. The
domino effect of unintended consequences is propped up by endless money
printing and government welfare distributed as direct cash payments to
Americans and illegal workers, and extended unemployment.
An example from the past of government interference in the
market is price controls at Valley Forge when farmers, who needed to feed their
families, did not abide by the government’s price controls, and sold their
produce to the British for gold while Washington’s continental army was running
at near starvation mode.
Economists believe this is what happened after 1971 when
President Nixon decided to experiment with price controls. The economy suffered
a plague of shortages, “we ran out of nearly everything” and, after price
controls ended in 1974, most of the shortages disappeared.
Monopolies and cartels such as OPEC can also cause artificial
scarcity of one product/service they offer. Holding a patent for a new drug can
cause shortages and high prices as a result.
The New Deal issued the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
which was “designed to boost agricultural prices by reducing surpluses. The
government bought livestock for slaughter and paid farmers subsidies not to
plant on part of their land.” This act caused artificial shortages.
Deliberate destruction of goods such as in a war situation
can cause panic hoarding driven by the fear of starvation. Such items in short
supply become mediums of exchange, more valuable than currency, i.e.,
cigarettes, bullets, chocolate, soap, women’s pantyhose, medicine, and
vitamins.
Destruction of goods because there is no longer a
distributor or buyer for that good can also cause hoarding. The Covid-19 action
by the government in 2020 had caused farmers in Florida to destroy tons of
tomatoes, squash, and other vegetables which were previously bought by restaurants.
Closed by government order, restaurants were no longer buying fresh produce.
Farmers also dumped thousands of gallons of milk as schools, universities, and
restaurants were closed indefinitely. At the same time, a shortage of milk in
grocery stores forced grocers to impose a purchase limit of one bottle or one gallon.
People thus hoarded milk and canned produce whenever available.
People have engaged in what is called panic-buying of
certain products in anticipation of a disaster, shortage, or large price increase.
Some examples of panic-buying through history include the first and second
world wars when everything was in short supply; the 1918-1920 Spanish flu
pandemic when people stored quinine and remedies for flu such as Vicks Vapor/Rub;
Cuban missile crisis in 1962 when people bought excess quantities of canned
food; any hurricane or tornado causes people to buy excess milk, bottled water,
bread, and toilet paper; Coronavirus pandemic caused people to panic-buy food,
facemasks, rubbing alcohol, hand-sanitizer, anti-bacterial wipes, anti-viral
wipes, and toilet paper. Panic-buying causes price gouging by both individuals
and grocery stores.
The most glaring example of constant hoarding occurred
during the entire existence of the socialist republics of the Iron Curtain
which were run by the highly inefficient centralized government of the
Communist Party. Citizens of such countries like Soviet Union, China, Poland,
Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cuba were
forced to constantly hoard items in short supply. Most products were in short
supply because of the absolute mismanagement by Communist Party apparatchiks.
In these socialist/communist countries hoarding was
punishable by law, and those caught served jail time. Both a black market and a
barter market emerged from the severe shortage of everything. People were
accustomed to carry around large sums of money and jute shopping bags to join a
line in progress because they knew, whatever was on sale, they needed it.
But why hoard toilet paper? It is a basic instinct to be
and stay clean. There is also the knowledge that, unlike food where there are
substitutes, toilet paper has no substitute unless you consider paper towels, newspapers,
and leaves.
People stockpile toilet paper because it is not perishable
and are afraid that the domestic production and distribution will be disrupted.
If needed, toilet paper can also be used as cosmetic wipes and tissue. Toilet
paper under the centralized Communist Party economy had huge splinters in it
and was always in short supply. Finally, people engage in mob mentality, ‘everyone
is hoarding TP, I should too.’
There are 150 companies that manufacture toilet paper, and
the average person uses under 100 rolls a year, some much less. The U.S. demand
for toilet paper stands at about 3 billion rolls a year. We import about 10
percent of our needs of TP.
If hoarding from grocery stores is not an
option, people turn to canning and drying fruits and vegetables. If you freeze
a lot of food, remember that, if the power goes out, the cache will spoil. Twice
we lost the contents of our freezer and refrigerator due to spoilage after
hurricanes when electricity was out for days and even weeks.
No matter what you hoard for survival, you
will eventually run out if production and distribution are disrupted for
extended periods of time.
Psychological hoarders will continue hoarding
unless the underlying medical problem is addressed.