Many Prepper YouTube channels and Prepper websites advocate the stocking up of barter items from the dollar store. Let us examine this line of thinking and explore other options for barter goods. I don’t doubt that the un-prepared might have a need for dollar store quality trinkets but there are four questions to ask yourself before stocking up on barter goods from a dollar store.
- One, will those, who are prepared with barter goods need your dollar store barter goods?
- Two, what exactly will those, so unprepared as to need something from the dollar store, have of value to trade with you?
- Three, is it worth the security risk to trade with people that are that un-prepared as to need something from the dollar store?
- Four, will the dollar store items be seen as valuable?
I have taught classes in family disaster preparedness and used several props from the dollar store to demonstrate and drive home the point that when you need your disaster supplies kit, you need the items to work since your life may depend upon it. I used a dollar store Swiss Army “style” knife with a bent-over blade to demonstrate the lack of quality. If you put 50 of these knives away for trade for a post-The End Of The World As We Know It (TEOTWAWKI) environment, how many people would make a trade for a knife of such poor quality? Perhaps they don’t know the knife is of poor quality and they make a trade for it and it breaks the first time they use it? Word will get around that you have junk and/or that you are a cheat. Both of these opinions will be detrimental to you, as you will be stuck with trade goods no one is willing to trade for and/or no one will trust you to trade with you for anything. Yes, there will be hoards of the un-prepared who need stuff but like you and I, they will need that stuff to be of quality to survive. The un-prepared will probably be desperate to begin with. The perception (or reality) that they got “ripped off” on a trade by you may make them even more desperate and thus turn them into a potential security threat.
I’ve been rough on dollar stores just to make a point. I’m not insinuating that there isn’t anything of barter value at a dollar store but you need to test those items and if, after the test, you wouldn’t put the item in your bug out bag, you shouldn’t put someone else in a bind by trading something of such poor quality. As my dad always used to say “your reputation is the most valuable thing you own, so don’t tarnish it.” I suspect after SHTF reputation will mean a whole lot more for everyday survival than it does today.
Something else to consider is how many other Preppers in your area have also stocked up on barter items from the dollar store? Will the barter marketplace be flush with dollar store knives that word gets around quickly are garbage? Will there be an overabundance of baby wipes to the point that the law of supply and demand kicks in and make your barter goods not worth as much as you had thought?
I used to accept the premise that the best barter goods were those that were consumable. I have several thousand strike anywhere and strike on box matches, that I stored up for Y2K specifically for barter, to prove my belief in this theory. I still think those matches will have value but what will I conceivably need that will be of about the same value? Over the years, I have come to believe that the “means of production” will be more valuable than most consumables.Continue reading“Bettering Your Post-SHTF Barter Preps, by 3AD Scout”
