When we came
to this town one reason was the shopping was convenient. There was plenty of choice in the town centre
and around. Now it is much changed and
what might have been routine shopping is very different.
Many places
were put out of business by the new big stores that the Council grovelled to
have built but now the big boy chains are also closing stores. So shopping is now not so much the exercise
of rational choice as the hurly burly of an overcrowded mega shed or finding,
something, anything on the web.
This sad story
comes from America where Walmart having achieved monopoly status in many
communities is now pulling out because profits are down and they have gone into
overstretch. So big that was supposed to
be better has turned out for the worse.
Over in the UK, Tesco, once alleged to be customer friendly has become
distinctly one to approach with care.
Then there are
the telephones. Here we learn that Currys, PC World and Vodaphone, all taken
over are to be turned into one shop stores and that means a lot of shops must
go. One interesting phone question is
who you are with, is it who you think it is?
This was sent
to me as an illustration:
1995: BT &
Securicor create Cellnet.
1999: BT buy
out Securicor and rebrands as BT Cellnet
2002: BT
Cellnet spun off from BT & renamed as O2
2005: O2 sold
to Telephonica for £18bn
2014: BT in
talks to buy EE
2015: O2 sold
to Hutchison Whampoa Limited (owners of 3) for £10.25bn pending regulatory
approval.
2016: Sale of
EE to BT for £12.5bn approved by Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).
Approval of sale of O2 to Hutchison Whampoa Limited, which is in the hands off
Brussels, still pending.
There are
times when I feel that we are all back in the jungle. The trouble is that now we are the prey and
the predators are big and getting bigger.
‘Is there anybody there?’ said the Shopper,
ReplyDeleteKnocking on the Wal-Mart door;
And he in the silence champed the grasses
Because there was nothing more: