cover of episode The junkyard economist

The junkyard economist

2024/5/24
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John Ralston是一位经验丰富的旧货处理专家,他通过清理旧房和办公室的垃圾,发现了各种各样的物品,并从中发现了经济价值。他能够识别出哪些物品具有潜在的价值,并将其出售以获取利润。他的工作不仅涉及到废旧物品的处理,还体现了他对资源的责任感,以及对经济趋势的敏锐洞察力。他认为,通过了解垃圾市场,可以了解到许多关于经济的趋势。 John Ralston的生意模式是通过清理垃圾并将其出售以获取利润。他将垃圾分为不同的类别,例如轮胎、黑色金属、有色金属和纸板等,并将其分别送到不同的回收中心进行处理。废旧轮胎的处理既可以带来收入,也可能导致损失,这取决于轮胎的状况和市场需求。黑色金属(含铁)的回收利用可以带来一定的收入,但其价值相对较低。有色金属(不含铁)的回收利用价值更高,特别是铜。瓦楞纸板的回收利用价值也较高,其价格会根据市场需求而波动。 除了回收利用,John Ralston还会通过eBay等在线平台销售一些具有收藏价值的物品。他通过评估物品的市场价值来决定是否在eBay上销售,并会考虑物品的销售速度和市场竞争等因素。他认为,一些看似不起眼的物品,也可能具有较高的价值,需要进行深入的研究和分析才能发现。 John Ralston对垃圾的处理体现了一种对资源的责任感。他认为,自己是这些物品的最后希望,如果不能妥善处理,它们最终会被埋在地下。他通过自己的努力,让大量的废旧物品得到了再次利用,并从中获得了经济上的回报。他对自己能够从垃圾中发现价值,并从中获得乐趣和成就感感到满意。 Erika Barris和James Sneed作为节目的主持人,对John Ralston的工作进行了深入的报道和分析。他们通过跟随John Ralston进行了一天的旧货处理工作,亲身体验了他的工作流程和经济模式。他们认为,通过观察John Ralston处理垃圾的方式,可以了解到许多关于经济的趋势,例如商品市场的价格波动、资源的循环利用以及电子商务的发展等。他们对John Ralston的敬业精神和经济头脑表示赞赏。

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John Ralston is in a nook under the stairs. He is on his hands and knees brushing rat poop off of old boxes, and he's digging through what looks to me like total junk. Car parts, wood, clothes.

John's clearing out all the junk out of a house in San Francisco. The same family has filled it with its stuff for a hundred years. The house just sold and everything inside needs to go. In this nook, there's chairs, a car axle. Yeah, a little tin scrap. There's stacks upon stacks of cardboard boxes. Some are wet, some are moldy. We've got canned food.

Turkey, sweet potato, oh cat food. This is similar. Photo albums from the 1940s, a box full of tangled extension cords. Ain't nothing here worth a squirt of piss. Really?

John says, really? So far, this is all junk. But John knows to keep digging because he's been clearing out houses and offices for about two decades. And he has found all kinds of stuff. The gold ring on his finger that says dad. He's not a dad. Every single appliance in his house. Enough toilet paper to last a lifetime. Once, he found $20,000 in...

In cash. And John, he's kind of an expert. He knows what moves, what sells, what we value. Like, he opens up a box and starts pulling out black and gray t-shirts. So you're almost hopeful you're going to find like a Nirvana t-shirt or a Rolling Stones t-shirt. They are not. But John says there's another thing to check. Maybe they're vintage. He shows us the hem at the bottom of one shirt. Modern construction involves a double stitch.

Vintage construction involves a single stitch. So that's double stitch, so that's not vintage. This man knows a lot about the economy. The consumer economy, the commodities markets, what's going on with labor and housing. He has been called Wasterdamus, a trash savant. And we are going to spend the day with him. Ready to hit the road? Hello and welcome to Planet Money. I'm Erika Barris. And I'm James Sneed.

Some people look at a pile of 100 discarded items and see junk. But John sees the components of 100 new items. He sees value. For him, a pile of 100 discarded items is a pile of 100 different economic indicators.

And if you can understand the junk market like John, you can understand dozens of trends in our economy. Today on the show, we are riding shotgun with a junk man through the streets of San Francisco as he collects trash and turns it into money. He explains the markets and shows us the ecosystem of how our reusable trash gets dealt with and how our junk sometimes gets a second chance at life.

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Support for NPR and the following message come from Edward Jones. What does it mean to be rich? Maybe it's less about reaching a magic number and more about discovering the magic in life. Edward Jones Financial Advisors are people you can count on for financial strategies that help support a life you love. Because the key to being rich is knowing what counts.

Learn about this comprehensive approach to planning at edwardjones.com slash findyourrich. Edward Jones, member SIPC. John starts every day here at a huge building. It's pink. It's part defunct storefront, warehouse, garage, and offices. There are old city signs, hundreds of yardsticks, shelves full of

Sex toys. John calls it his museum of junk. Stuff is piled up so high that we have to squeeze through this maze of boxes. Whoa, look at all this stuff. Yeah, it's crazy. Oh my goodness. A little embarrassing. This is not embarrassing. This is amazing. What is all this? This is the stuff that we're like, oh, we can't throw that out.

Back when he was in high school, he took one of those career tests that told him he was best suited to be a garbage man. And John took great offense because he was an aspiring poet. So a life of trash? No way. He went to college for poetry, work construction. After his shifts, he'd haul debris down to the dump. And the garbage there beckoned. The San Francisco dump is...

has an artist in residency there for an artist to go for three months and pick through the garbage. Really? Cool. And I was like, wow, you could go play in the garbage? John got one of those residencies, made sculptures out of trash, wrote a zine called City Sphincter.

John became obsessed with the garbage. The reward part of my brain was like so lit up from digging through the trash and finding cool things. Turns out that career test got it right. And I was like, I just discovered like a life hack. The secret to life is the garbage. And then I would be driving around like going in dumpsters and finding cool stuff. I was just totally hooked on junk.

Late nights cruising looking for junk. Soft music playing in the background. A San Francisco story. Mary White sexy music playing.

And that is how John ended up starting a business, cleaning out houses and offices. He's got a staff of seven employees who help him. And it's been a good business because when people and companies move out of spaces, they just don't want to deal with their stuff. So they pay him to deal with it. They pay him for that service. His job is to dispose of other people's junk. He gets paid by the

by the truckload. For the house earlier with the old cat food and not vintage shirts, he's probably going to get about $4,000. But then when he's got truckloads of office chairs or vintage t-shirts, there's a decision to make. John could just dump it or he could sell it. Yeah. Some of it he sells for raw materials. Like he can bring things made of aluminum or copper down to the scrapyard and see what he can get. And some of it

is valuable as is. Hopefully you're smart enough to pick out the valuable things quickly and have a market for it. That's just a little bit of pepper on top. That's when you make the gravy. I'll show you. We'll go see. All right, let's go see.

John's got his pickup truck out front. It's loaded with junk he got from cleaning out places the last couple weeks. He's got tires, a random bag of clothes, and what looks like a ton of metal. And his goal today is to make $50 an hour by selling everything in this truck. Our first stop, tires. John's got nine tires. We drive to an auto repair shop to see how much these are worth. Hola, jefe. I have tires on the rims.

Giovanni Cepeda runs the shop and John starts selling him on the tires. These are good tires. You're gonna want to pay me for these. But Giovanni is like, I'm gonna test these out first. Starts bouncing them, kicking them, because he explains the more they bounce, the junkier they are. That one's no good.

Tire 1 and 2 are too bouncy. Tire 3 still has some life in it. In the end, 7 are trash and 2 can still be sold. Giovanni says he'll buy those two for about $40. The other 7 will have to be recycled. They will most likely get turned into what is called crumb rubber, that squishy stuff on kids' playgrounds. John and Giovanni, they haggle for a little bit, and then... Comes out with his calculator...

That's math. Okay, just give me 100 bucks, huh?

Wait, so this is costing you money? John tells us when he finds tires on the job, it's also his job to get rid of them, which is why whatever he can't sell, he has to pay to dispose of. Giovanni charges $30 to dispose of each tire. In total, that would have cost John about $200. But he got a discount because he's dropping off a bunch and because he knows Giovanni. Thank you, Giovanni. Anytime.

That went well. One hour in and we are at negative $100. Our next stop is one of John's favorite places on Earth. As soon as we get near it, the air takes on the strong metallic smell. So here we are at Sercosta Iron and Metals. This is the ferrous side. Ferrous is the iron-based stuff, like steel. Basically, anything a magnet can stick to. This is the only tool you need to be a scrap guy.

Is that a magnet? A magnet. That's it? That's all you need? Obviously a scrap guy, John always carries the magnet with him. So before we can enter, John drives his truck onto a huge scale. It weighs almost 7,000 pounds. Now we go dump. We drive around the corner. Oh, hold on. Stop, stop, stop.

This claw is just picking up every, like, toasters, computer parts. This huge claw is just dropping stuff onto a gigantic hill of metal. John is standing in the bed of his truck and he just starts tossing stuff out. The claw grabs the stuff and feeds it into a shipping container. Small bits of steel and iron are flying through the air. Salute the claw.

Don't breathe right now. This is the stuff that's going to get sent to steel manufacturers in Mexico or Turkey, and some stays in the U.S. Steel is, in theory, infinitely recyclable. It can be melted down over and over again and made into a new lamp or toaster, which makes the stuff John is tossing pretty valuable. We drive back onto the scale to get Wade to see how much ferrous metal John just dumped.

And the scale says John tossed 1,400 pounds. The scrapyard is paying a little less than four cents per pound, which makes the total... Here we go. Moment of truth. $55. $55? That's not bad. That's not bad. It's almost like three quarters of a ton. Yeah. We lost money earlier in the day. It's a roller coaster around here. It's a wild ride. Thank you.

At this point, John's made negative $45. Actually, negative $45.20 because when he grabs his bills, he leaves two dimes on the counter. A tip. That was like the majority of the stuff in the truck, though. The majority of the volume, the minority of the money.

Yeah, the real moneymaker is the non-ferrous stuff. The things that don't stick to a magnet. We jump back into the truck and drive around the corner to bring all the non-ferrous materials to another big scale. And we start dumping based on categories. First up, John's getting rid of a bunch of lead fishing weights. Because, you know, lead is toxic. Really, I shouldn't be touching it with my bare hands. You really should not be touching that with your bare hands. He rubs his hands all over them.

Killing me. The lead gets weighed and processed. And that lead could go into making car batteries. A lot of that manufacturing is done in the U.S. Next up, two big outdoor light casings. John's not sure what material they're made of. He brings it to a worker to test. The guy rubs a coin against the metal and it leaves a scratch. The trick is, if you want to know, aluminum is very soft. You can scratch it.

Oh. Yeah, it's basically peeling back. This means it's aluminum. And that's great for John because it's worth more than he thought it'd be. And finally, John has a cardboard box full of tangled wires. This is the most valuable. It's worth more than regular household. And what's in that that makes it so valuable? I guess it's just more copper.

When it comes to scrapyard metals, copper is often the most valuable. It is the prized commodity here. It's in everything techie, like phones and electric vehicles. John says the purer or cleaner the copper is, the more valuable. Like an actual bare copper wire is worth more than a string of Christmas tree lights that has copper in it. If you want to strip all the plastic coating off your...

wires, then you'll get a better price for it. The copper John has today is not all that clean. He doesn't have time to strip the wires, but he's still able to sell them. They have a clean price and a dirty price. This is very dirty. This has got so much plastic in it, they give you a very small, low price for the wire. They estimate his wires are 30 to 35 percent copper.

Altogether, he makes $100.15 for the copper, the brass, the aluminum, and the lead. The current tally is $54.95, and at least now he's not losing money. We get back into the truck and drive to our last scrap stop of the day, a recycling center at the San Francisco Port. Cardboard.

I have cardboard. John says even though cardboard may all look the same, it is not. Cardboard has different grades.

It's got the edge crush test, tells you how strong it is. Oh, look at that. John points to something we'd never really noticed before. There's a stamp that says edge crush test on the box with a number in the center. That number, it tells you how much weight a stacked box can handle before it just flattens. I feel like I've never actually closely looked at any of my cardboard boxes. This has an edge crush at 32 and that one's 44. 32 is a common rating for single wall boxes.

Around 44 is common for double wall boxes. What John has today is called old corrugated cardboard or OCC. This kind of cardboard can be recycled about six or seven times before it becomes unrecyclable. And it is a very valuable commodity. Yeah, the price for old corrugated cardboard can fluctuate. It had drastically dropped before the pandemic, then skyrocketed when people started buying tons of stuff.

It's at a high right now because there's more demand for recycled paper products. I'm realizing if prices are holding steady, cardboard's 95 a ton and ferrous tin scrap is 80 a ton. So cardboard's more valuable per pound.

We're at a recycling center that's ginormous. It's the size of a few football fields. It's essentially a warehouse that recycles all the classics: glass, paper, plastic. Oh man, this is cool!

Junk City. This is the stuff I've been dreaming of. There are bales of plastic three times taller than us. There's bales of thinner plastic, like the kind raspberries come in. There are bales of thicker plastics. Yeah, that's laundry detergent and...

in a meta moment, a recycling bin being recycled in that bin. We head to the cardboard station. There's a conveyor belt that swoops the cardboard boxes around. They get bound up in cardboard bales. Some will wind up on a container ship going to Indonesia or Malaysia. By now, we know the drill. John tosses his cardboard and we head to get weighed and paid. They're buying cardboard at a pretty high price, $95 a ton. Wait, this is it? This is the payout? Yeah.

95 cents. That's 95 cents? Oh, wow. Thank you. That's it? It was just 20 pounds. Including the 95 cents, Johns made $55.90. But he also got paid 100 bucks just for picking up the cardboard, so his total is actually $155.90.

As we leave, we see other trucks loaded up with cardboard heading into the warehouse. I call them cardboard cowboys because it's alliterative, but I don't know what you would call it. They're just, yeah, hustlers. They're recyclers.

People who study commodities markets would call them peddlers. They peddle or use wares for money. And as long as there have been markets, there have been peddlers. For all the things John has offloaded so far today, there has been a clear market for where they go. But what do you do when you have something like a vintage can of tobacco that you don't want to scrap? Modern-day peddlers have another option, going online.

After the break, John goes to eBay.

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It is a beautiful day in San Francisco, and we're rolling around town in a hauler truck with John Ralston. He is a dormant poet who makes a living and makes sense of the world through its junk. People in the U.S., we toss out nearly 300 million tons of trash every year.

And John, he can't stop thinking about all those people who might still find value in that trash. So if you're looking at things and you are constantly assessing them and you are seeing their value, is it a blessing or is it a curse? Oh, it's an overwhelming burden. Why is that? Because I'm the last hope for this stuff. And if I can't figure it out, it's going in the ground.

John feels the metaphorical weight of all this trash. And that informs what he keeps and doesn't keep. Back at his warehouse, most of the stuff John collects and stores, it's here because, unlike the stuff we've been dropping off, he believes that it still has value as is. He shows us this 80-year-old tin can of rolling tobacco. Got the tax stamp, the paper tax stamp. Oh, cool. What? What?

And that, to me, with the tax stamps, it's still sealed inside. It still smells like tobacco. Yeah, and it's got, like, good color. It's not rusty. Yeah, some of the stuff John collects from cleanouts, he can sell at flea markets or on eBay. We should say eBay is a funder of NPR.

John says there are some obvious contenders for eBay, like gold watches or an autographed jersey. But there are some things that are less obvious. The stuff that's valuable that sells on eBay is not glamorous. It's like weird components that you don't really know what it is, but you look it up and you're like, oh, that's $600. So that's why you do a lot more work of research in order to get...

the valuable things out of the garbage. There are all kinds of strange things that John has sold on eBay. Expired 35mm film, Prince and Madonna cassette singles, even a Chanel shoebox without the shoes, just the empty box. Right now, he has 3,500 things listed on eBay. When John's putting something on eBay, it's got to meet some specific criteria. First, it's not worth posting unless he can sell it for at least $30.

Second, what does the competition look like? To show us, he grabs a ceramic bourbon decanter. So you go to Google Lens and take a picture of it. And look at that. There's one example for $40 on eBay right now. Rare vintage 1981 Fat English Hunter, 12 inches, ceramic bourbon decanter.

Here it is for $22. But John goes a step further. We're going to scroll down to sold because that's what it's actually worth is what people have paid, not what people are asking. No exact matches. So that means all those people are asking someone to buy it. Nobody's actually bought it. So to me, that's not worth putting on eBay. Another metric John uses, the sell-through rate. Which tells you how many sell items.

that are listed. So you want like around 100% sell-through rate. If it's got like a 20% sell-through rate, that means there's 80% of them are still up for sale and nobody's buying them. Aha. So... So they're not moving. They're not a hot seller. So it's not...

It's not worth my time for these slow runners to sit on my storage shelf. How quickly something sells and how long it'll sit in his space are as important as how much it might sell for. And John tells us one more thing to consider. Just because something retails at a high price doesn't mean it'll necessarily sell for him. In this way, John is kind of like a matchmaker. He

He has objects and he has to find buyers for them. And eBay makes this easier in some ways. But there are also objects that there just aren't markets for. If nobody wants it, what do you do? I mean, lately we're throwing away Victorian furniture, solid wood, exquisite craftsmanship. But you can't donate it anywhere and you can't get anybody to buy it and you can't hold on to it. So you throw it away.

And that just feels stooping. People don't want it. It's been about 10 hours since we first set out on our adventure. John's arms are streaked with dirt and maybe some lead dust. He starts pulling out receipts. How are you feeling, John? Sun's setting.

My body is stiffening. It must be time to count the money. John's goal for today was to make $50 an hour. After 10 hours, that should be around $500 in total. We start calculating. Plus $3. Plus 95 cents. Plus $39. He adds up what he got for the tires, metals, cardboard, and a few other things. Meanwhile, on eBay, not a bad day for eBay. We had

few sales but they were big ticket items. He sold five items: a vintage lacrosse stick, a Harry Potter backpack, and we sold a vintage silver plated three wick cigar lighter without the base.

Rare. In total, between eBay and all the scrapping, he made $903.28, which means his rate for the day was more than $90 an hour. And remember, for John, this money is the gravy. Yeah, the pepper. Right, right. His real income comes from providing clearing out services. And in the end?

he met his goal and an entire truckload of stuff got a second or third or fourth life that it wouldn't have had otherwise. So I'm constantly doubting myself and questioning myself, but I'm also waking up every morning, like pretty stoked to go see what's in the garbage. So that's, that's a success, right?

Coming up on Planet Money, we are living through a golden age of online fraud and scams. But what are you supposed to do when your money's gone? What happens after the scam? It was so hard to try to face the fact that, oh, you've been scammed in a really costly way. Like, it's devastating. You're like, oh my God, can I even admit this? We follow one cybercrime victim to learn how it works and how it feels to try to get your money back.

That's next time on Planet Money.

This episode was, I guess, produced by me, James Sneed, with help from Emma Peasley, and edited by Jess Jang. Engineering by Joss Newell, was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez, and Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. Thank you to Brett Biggers and Joe Pickard for helping me understand the reused commodity markets, and to Adam Minter, whose book Junkyard Planet was a delight to read. I'm Erica Barris. And I'm James Sneed. This is NPR. Thanks for listening. ♪

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