While I'm not longer big on making New Year resolutions (birthday resolutions are better anyway), I do have one thing I'm going to work on starting in 2023. My goal is to try to support non-China-made products and goods.
I can already tell that this is going to be difficult for a LOT of reasons:
- It's tough to find such items, especially since Amazon and Walmart are my go-to shopping places.
- Products not made in China tend to cost more - in some cases, a lot more.
- A lot of American-based companies' products are manufactured in China.
- It's often difficult to tell where a product is from until after you've received it.
Q: Where is this made?A: Hello, Our company is US Based (Seattle, Washington) and our scales are manufactured in China to keep our price competitive.
And I can relate to the whole keeping the prices "competitive" thing. Just do a quick Amazon search on any product you want, then compare the costs of non-Chinese goods to those made almost anywhere else. Of course, the costs are higher for American-made goods for several reasons. Good reasons but, still.
However, I am talking about being more careful from here on out in choosing non-China goods. That scale was my Christmas gift (to me!) to replace my 4-year-old scale, which is also China-made...
When my family asked, as they do every year, what I wanted this Christmas, I requested a replacement for my stand mixer - a 4-quart Hamilton Beach electric stand mixer, made in the USA, mind you - that died while trying to mix brioche dough. (If I'd bought the mixer myself, I would have gotten an extended warranty. My family never does that.)
After I asked for a replacement mixer, one of my brothers hinted that I might actually be getting a KitchenAid. That made me so happy and I assumed at first that it would definitely be American-made. But that might not be true...
Doing a little bit of research for this post on KitchenAid mixers, I ran across this on the No To China (NTC) page:
KitchenAid is indeed shifting production to hand mixers to China and didn’t bother telling its customer service team.
KitchenAid is testing the waters to see if consumers care where their mixers are made.
KitchenAid is manufacturing in Ohio, but tapping China to meet demand.
KitchenAid manufactures in both Ohio and China, and chooses to sell the cheap, China-made models through retailers like Amazon.
This information was given in answer to NTC's inquiry about the country of origin. They received a response from someone in KitchenAid's Consumer Services which NTC said:
"...led me to even more questions, as Brittany asserted that “all of our hand mixers are in fact made in Greenville, Ohio” when in the same conversation Tammy listed one model that was made in China."
Yeah, so, I am over here hoping for an American-made KitchenAid. Feel free to put that to music.
I wondered if, since there seems to be an app or extension around for almost anything, if there was one for weeding out China-made products. I found a couple of sites that are... kind of useful. Sorta, maybe, etc. I found the main ones via a page on the Kim Komando site. Here's my starter list:
- Order the item
- Go to your Order Details page
- Find the seller and left-click on that link to open it in a new tab
- Cancel the order before it goes through (this is the risky part)
- Now you can use the storefront link and either "Ask a question" with the link on the top left side or view the seller's store business address - which usually tells you all you need to know!