A series of international sports events helped boost Shanghai's
retail sales by a fifth during last week's National Day holiday,
the city's economic commission said yesterday.
Sales generated by the 425 retailers surveyed jumped 20.5
percent to 5.1 billion yuan (US$680 million) between October 1 and
7 from the same period last year, the Shanghai Economic Commission
said in a report. The growth rate was 3.7 percentage points higher
than the pace registered during the Labor Day holiday in May and
6.1 percentage points higher than February's Spring Festival.
Chen Yuxian, author of the report, attributed the Golden Week
spending boom partly to the FIFA Women's World Cup soccer
championship, the Special Olympics and the Formula One Chinese
Grand Prix, which all brought large numbers of athletes and sports
fans to town.
"Several local shopping and tourism events coincided with the
holiday, plus the good weather also pushed up sales," Chen
said.
Hundreds of theme events were held citywide as part of the
Shanghai Shopping Festival, including the Luwan District's imported
food show, an international shopping carnival in Jing'an District,
Huangpu's jewelry fete and a wine-tasting gala in Hongkou
District.
Hypermarkets, supermarkets and convenience stores were the
leading contributors to the consumption boom, accounting for 41.2
percent of the total retail sales, the report said. Sales in
department stores and shopping malls also rose.
But sales in the restaurant sector fell 16.4 percent to 137.8
million yuan from the same period a year earlier, and receipts for
hotels and related service businesses dropped 3.2 percent to 97.2
million yuan, the report said, without stating a reason.
Local retail powerhouse Shanghai Brilliance (Group) Co generated
1.69 billion yuan in sales over the weeklong holiday, up 20.7
percent year on year and topping the eight major business groups
surveyed by the commission.
Meanwhile, retail sales in the suburbs totaled 763 million yuan,
up 16.6 percent, led by Nanhui, Songjiang, Jinshan, Qingpu and
Baoshan districts, which reported a rise of more than 25
percent.
The report also said food prices remained stable during the
holiday, with meat prices falling from the pre-holiday period while
prices of green-leaf vegetables were up slightly.
(Shanghai Daily October 8, 2007)