Yep, their business model is basically to sell smaller packages for a low upfront price, taking advantage of customers that either don't have the money to buy the big package or have limited transport options.
It's another one of those things that illustrate that it's expensive to be poor.
Imo, it's absolutely fantastic for things like cards and gift bags.
People only look at a card for like 30 seconds and then forget about it. It makes more sense to get one at 1/6 of the price of a regular one. Same thing with gift bags.
For most other things, everything in it is shit. But it has its niche cases where it's superior like that.
I remember watching a YouTube video where dollar store would run local businesses out and would sell low quality products at a higher price once there is no competition.
Yeah it's a weird flex, bragging about supporting an exploitative business that price gouges essentials and kills small business all while shaming the people who are trapped by the very system.
Is this blaming customers who can afford increased pricing at Goodwill or is it blaming Goodwill for milking their customers once they realized they could get away with it?
It's blaming people that go into thrift stores looking for items to immediately flip for profit online, depriving the community of needed material resources at an affordable price.
It can be both. People don't realize how much the way they spend their money has a lot to do with why things are the way they are nowadays.
The first time a company raised prices with a bullshit reason they should've gone bankrupt by lack of customers. But they didn't because people have proven they'll shell out money regardless of the price.
Nonsense. I grew up around a few VERY wealthy kids, and they were fucking dicks. I stopped hanging out with them when they would refuse to ever tip servers or throw their pocket change on the table. Father made obscene money, mother was incredibly giving, and their kids bring their own soft drink into a restaurant.