The El_Mac answer.
Axiom 1) Everyone needs jobs. Jobs need money. And the world needs more efficiency and sustainability.
Axiom 2) The less someone charges for something, the more they need the money (unless they're being subsidized).
Investments (in the economic sense, not colloquial)
- Buy tools as cheap as you can. "Tools" are anything that allow you to produce more than the counter-factual or allow you to cut costs in the longrun. Schooling. The first 1800 calories in a day. The first $8k of vehicle. Credit. Insulation for your home repairs. A tooth filling now so that you can avoid a root-canal later.
- You'll note that these dollars are going to provide employment somewhere. But, more importantly, this means that you will have more money later AND now. So, while you're mulling wisdom about how to be more effective consumer, you will have a greater amount of ability to enact your will.
- If you spend the savings purely locally, you then offset whatever local 'damage' you caused by outsourcing. You can also donate the savings locally in a way that makes your locale more long-term competitive.
Luxury
- Spend your luxury dollars ethically and/or locally. Hell, treat it as social signaling if you want. Pay your externalities. When it comes to 'buying tools', then it's really difficult to act with maximum morality. You need to eat. You need to work. You need to cut your heating costs. But not with your luxury goods. It's literally a moral issue.
- You don't need to completely source your luxury goods perfectly. It's impossible. So don't. But just remember that you're getting a significant discount on any goods that have an ethical component being violated.
Buy offsets
- There will be a difference between what you actually spend on any specific luxury and what the luxury should cost. What does the average person do? They buy more luxury goods (or increase their savings). And then go all slacktivist and 'like' a few socially conscious posts on Facebook. That's not the way the world gets better. Here's the thing, in some metrics, human suffering is fungible and so are dollars. Every unethical dollar you spend is creating 'X' amount of suffering. If you spend your discount on things that are more cost-effective than X then you're actually decreasing the net suffering in the world. Now, depending on your partisan instincts, you might value local suffering more than distant suffering, and so donate to the food bank to cover the fact that you got a $400 subsidy on your iPhone. Whatever. That can be hashed out later. The important thing is that people stop putting the $400 they saved into another luxury good that also has externalities that discount it. Blood diamonds and Thailand bondage porn or whatever. There are better and worse ways of spending your subsidy.
- Ratchet upwards. Here's the biggest. Your offset spending can always be spent better. So hey, you start at the foodbank. Then you ratchet upwards from there. Always looking for the greatest bang-for-the-buck in 'making the world better'. And these dollars come from your savings on luxuries. They weren't your dollars to begin with. The things you were bought was subsidized with pain.
Unfortunately as a consumer, deciding to buy or not buy a product doesn't make any difference at all.
The only power we really have as consumers is to raise awareness of an issue.
This is literally incorrect along all the dimensions that make the world worse than it needs to be. Your most powerful effect is as a consumer. If you happen to have the charisma to sway people, you've got an advantage that you shouldn't blow, absolutely. But your most
guaranteed source of power? As a consumer. As a voter, you get to cast one choice for 3 imperfect candidates every few years. As an advocate,
you literally cannot expect people to not walk the walk you won't walk. Especially when you're middle-income.
People will do what they're paid to do. And only a handful of people get paid
as much as they would elsewhere actually making the world a better place. Most people trying to do good things with their employment give a
massive discount. You want people to do better things? Pay them to.
As for 'swaying' people. Unlikely at the mean, median, or mode. Of all the charity dollars you've given in the last year (outside of tipping), how many greater dollars have you leveraged by suasion? Some people can do good suasion. Most can't.
The majority of your power is as a consumer.
Always shop the local guys you want to stay in business even if they cost more. Walmart might not notice, but they do. Their kids go to the same schools as yours. That's a Farm Dad-ism. He keeps getting smarter the older I get.
It's not bad. "Shopping local" means you're gunning for the multiplier effect. It's how you reduce the odds or intensity of a local recession. And there absolutely is value in knowing you're helping a community stay afloat.
I go one-up, since I am in Canada. When I use my debit instead of my VISA, I
literally give the merchant 4x more money than I 'lose' in lost points. That's an
incredible amount of multiplier on my spent-dollar. I treat it like a 3% 'tip' that only costs me 0.7%.
The appropriate response is not to ask poor people to make financially unsound decisions but to put Apple's executives in jail for procuring iPhones from Chinese suppliers at prices that make it certain those suppliers will use slave labor.
I keep two minds on this one. The first is
poor people need jobs more. So, if someone is working at a discount, then I have to ask about whether providing that person employment
will help them. Well, actually just one mind. I have
zero problems with forcing Canadian companies to only source labour and products from places that have certified humanitarian standards. Canada's a small player, so we'd need some backup. As a consumer, I use my 'tool/luxury' metric above to offset my subsidy. As a voter, I'd vote to reduce my subsidy. But, lol, like that option will ever come up. Ergo, I depend on my personal behavior.
But watch the developing world scramble once their 'race to the bottom' includes "the place that gives lunch breaks". They'll happily do it to gain access to our markets. More than happily, since (obviously) their citizenry will be happier. No government is going to mind writing
pro-humane legislation to
increase their competitiveness.
Oh, I didn't mean just anti-Trump shopping (though thanks for that). My reference to my own anti-Trump shopping was just intended as a sign of how ad hoc is my ethical shopping.
What I want is the list (I'm sure Lexicus is right, that there isn't one) that lets me be ethical across the board in my consumerism.
MSC for fish is the one I know about most. The trick is to ratchet upwards. You can only know what you know. And you control your own curiosity.