HONG KONG, Nov 11: Alice Zhang, a 29-year-old marketer in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, has spent only roughly half what she did last year during the “Singles’ Day” online shopping festival, switching to cheaper choices and giving up on buying new shoes after pay was cut by more than 20 per cent. That’s typical, analysts say, of the trend for the extended discount campaign that is China’s equivalent to Black Friday sales, initiated by China’s Alibaba in 2009 as a 1-day event on November 11 — Double 11 in Chinese parlance, and considered a symbol of unattached singles. “I’ve made a conscious effort to cut back,” said Zhang, who spent around 3,000 yuan (USD 421) this year. Singles’ Day spending is closely watched by observers and economists as an indicator for the wider ec
China’s ‘Singles’ Day’ shopping festival gauge of Beijing’s effort to get consumers to spend more
Daily Excelsior3 hrs ago
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