
Originally Posted by
scrivy
Interesting....
Let's imagine a world where there are no local shops. Imagine the inconvenience of not being able to get anything that day. Imagine not getting the items you wanted for up to a week. Imagine not receiving the right item, or it was the wrong size, shape or colour. Imagine buying a present for a birthday or a special occasion and it didn't turn up.
It's not easy out there, but helping support other towns or other countries' economies is certainly not helping ours. How high do we want to see our balance of trade deficit grow? How high do we want to see our unemployment grow? How high do we want to see our crime statistics grow?
You may like to save lots by using out-of-town or overseas websites, but in the end, all you'll achieve is empty local shops, higher local and national unemployment, and simply less people able to afford to use your business. So you may directly save a percentage by buying overseas, but indirectly, could you survive a drop of the same percentage of sales in your business from unemployed locals not being able to afford your services? I am picking not.
Internet retailers generally do not stock a whole range from their suppliers, but usually only the top-selling lines. Local businesses stock a wider range of unique items, because they buy for their individual market.
When you go out of town for the weekends, would you really travel to another town to sit down for a coffee, or to have dinner, beside 30 empty shops, with no atmosphere? Imagine what rates home owners will pay when shop tenants aren't subsidising their rates any more. After all, who will pay for all the CBD under-verandah lighting currently paid by shop tenants? Imagine if this wasn't lit up. Imagine how dark and dingy CBD streets would be. Not to mention a magnet for graffiti, vandalisim and crime. A great reason for people to not visit your town. Is that really what we want? If we all spent just $2 a week buying New Zealand made items, as opposed to items from Australia or elsewhere, we would keep 10,000 New Zealanders in employment! Imagine if we spent $50 a week!
This would solve most of New Zealand's unemployment woes, not to mention reduce our balance of trade deficit, and reduce our huge reliance on overseas borrowing. Hey, it might even mean a reduction of your taxes.
Having local shops close down means advertising spend will decrease, media jobs will go, then your free community newspapers will stop. Sponsorship will decrease, and sports teams, local schools and individuals will suffer. They all get a large amount of community support from local retailers.
For many charities, the majority of their income is from the support of communities and local businesses. How will they suffer from a dramatic reduction in funding? I hate to think of the consequences of any reduction in the services that they currently provide to our local communities.
Studies have shown that local businesses donate to community causes at more than twice the rate of large corporations. But, how many internet businesses get hit up for local sponsorship? Also, how many overseas businesses donate to your community? Locally owned retailers support local causes - it's as simple as that.
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