Last night we got to experience Halloween in a new way. As a stand-in parent for our neighbor’s boy. So we did the march around the neighborhood with the rest of the adults shepherding kids on the trick or treating mission. As we wandered around I couldn’t help but think about the economics and psychonomics (I think I made that word up — but I mean mindset) of this consumer made holiday.

From what I can tell, the Great Pumpkin is running neck and neck with Santa Claus when it comes to the most expensive holiday of the year. It’s not just the U.S. that has experienced this boon, according to this article which puts the Canadian spin on things:

The Retail Council of Canada estimates that Canadians spend $1.15 billion on candy, pumpkins, costumes and decorations as they mark the scariest night of the year, which this year amounts to about $59 each, down from $60 in 2006.

Of course in the US, land of the consumer, we go one better as we tally up the spooky cost of Halloween

According to the National Retail Foundation, Americans are expected to fork out more than $5 billion this Halloween season.

From what I saw last night, this doesn’t surprise me one bit. Halloween used to be a few bags of candy and a costume. Now it is a huge industry of decorations, lights, and large blow-up things that makes the neighborhood look like an orange and black version of Christmas.

Now I’m all for having fun, but it seems to me that all this time and effort spent on costumes and wandering from house to house doesn’t get the ROE (return on effort) one would hope for. After all, your kid could score far more chocolate from one trip to Costco and a supersize bag than a whole night of walking door to door. So, what’s the mystique?

I’m not really sure, other than tradition and needing to do what everyone else is doing. For the people I saw that were truly having fun enjoying their little ones in creative costumes, I get the whole appeal. For so many others,though it seemed like yet another dreaded moment to complete an obligation and get through the holiday. That’s where the mindset comes in.

While I amused myself thinking of the term Psychonomics as we wandered the streets, I was amazed at just how rich the insights could be if you just took a look around at how people were acting and what they were saying. I wrote about my observations on The Mindset of Halloween on my blog today. The part that most applies to money, though is the mindset of scarcity. I’ve written about it before and I’m sure I’ll do so again, but last night was like watching scarcity and desperate consumption on a movie screen and it was scary…

I couldn’t find a better example of scarcity mindset and the unrelenting drive for more more more than Halloween (well, maybe Christmas). Here you’ve got kids, many of them older kids schlepping from house to house begging for candy. No longer is one treat sufficient. Oh no. Now it is two, three, or a handful. And, they walk around with multiple bags filled so full that they drag on the ground like a thin plastic grocery bag filled with several gallons of milk. Still…. they want more. Scurrying faster toward houses with lights and then complaining loudly about houses without candy or lights saying “another Dud that sucks.”

And, it is not just the kids anymore. The adults are into the act too with one trying to outdo the other when it comes to Halloween decorations and “Haunted Yards”. Now don’t get me wrong…this can be a lot of fun. I went to more than my share of horror halls and funky displays in my time. Yet, I wonder – how many of these displays are created out of pure joy and how many are done out of a chance to show off, spend money, or just look good? I’m not sure…only each person really knows. What I would love is a Suze Orman moment with these folks though to ask them if they have any credit card debt or if they are funding their haunted front yard cemeteries with borrowed money and compounded interest. Now THAT would be spooky…

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Paula Gregorowicz is the Comfortable in Your Own Skin(tm) Coach and you can learn more at her website www.thepaulagcompany.com and blog www.coaching4lesbians.com .

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