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Black Friday frenzy goes global, and not everyone’s happy

A business offers Black Friday bargains in Paris on Nov. 29. People don't celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday in Europe, but the Black Friday shopping phenomenon has spread to retailers across the Atlantic in recent years.
A business offers Black Friday bargains in Paris on Nov. 29. People don’t celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday in Europe, but the Black Friday shopping phenomenon has spread to retailers across the Atlantic in recent years.
(Thibault Camus / Associated Press)
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People don’t celebrate Thanksgiving in France, or Russia, or South Africa — but they do shop on Black Friday.

The U.S. retail phenomenon has spread around the world in recent years with such force that it’s prompting a backlash from some activists, politicians and even consumers.

Near Paris, climate demonstrators blocked a shopping mall and gathered in front of Amazon’s headquarters to protest what they say is overproduction that is killing the planet. Workers at Amazon in Germany went on strike for better pay. Some French lawmakers want to ban Black Friday altogether.

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Workers at six Amazon distribution centers across Germany have gone on strike for better pay, according to the trade union ver.di.

Nov. 29, 2019

Consumer rights groups in Britain and some other countries say retailers use Black Friday as a slogan to lure in shoppers, but it’s not always clear how real or big the discounts are. Other critics say it hurts small businesses.

“The planet burns, oceans die, and we still want to consume, consume, and therefore produce, produce — until we eradicate all living things? ... We will not betray our children for a 30% discount!” reads a manifesto by groups holding “Block Friday” protests around Paris.

BLACK FRIDAY on Oxford Street in London
Shoppers pass a promotional sign for ‘Black Friday’ sales discounts, outside a store on Oxford Street in London.
(TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/Getty Images)

Globalized commerce has brought U.S. consumer tastes to shoppers around the world, from Halloween candy to breakfast cereal and peanut butter, sometimes even supplanting local traditions.

To many activists, Black Friday is the epitome of this shift, a purely commercial event designed to boost U.S. retailers ahead of the Christmas holidays, the symbol of capitalism run amok.

In Britain, where the big winter sales have traditionally been held on the day after Christmas, companies have adopted Black Friday marketing campaigns since about 2010. After a rise in business on the day in the first years, the volume of shopping has leveled off, with most of it happening online over multiple days.

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Research by a U.K. consumer association found that 61% of goods advertised in Black Friday deals last year were cheaper or about the same price both before and after the event.

That echoes similar warnings in other countries. Russia’s consumer watchdog published detailed tips on how to avoid getting fooled, like checking whether prices were raised before Friday to make deals look good or whether delivery costs are inflated.

The Black Friday push has also extended to Cyber Monday. And retailers in several countries have gone even further by spreading sales across “Black Week.”

Black Friday shopping in Prague, Czech Republic
A couple walks next to a Black Friday advertisement in front of a shop in Prague city center, Czech Republic.
(MARTIN DIVISEK/EPA/REX/Shutterstock)

In the Czech Republic, one electronics chain encourages shoppers — in English, of course — to “Make Black Friday Great Again,” in an ad featuring a suited man wearing the distinctive red cap used by U.S. President Donald Trump’s election campaign.

Broadcasters in South Africa, one of the world’s most socially and economically unequal nations, showed people waiting in line to shop. The respected weekly Mail & Guardian newspaper decried in a scathing editorial how Black Friday is used to enrich big retailers.

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“Like no other day, this Friday shows how broken the world we have built is,” it said.

Black Friday has meanwhile had to adapt to cultural norms. Egyptians, for example, have taken on all aspects of the occasion — except the name, because Friday is a sacred day of worship for Muslims. Rather than scrap the event, many retailers decided to rename it White Friday or Yellow Friday.

The term Black Friday comes from an apocryphal retailers claim that it is the day when, because of the volume of sales concentrated in the period, their balance of accounts for the year shifted from being in deficit, or in the red, to a profit, in the black.

Among other concerns is that Black Friday could hurt small businesses that do not have the vast marketing budgets and online presence of big retail chains or multinationals.

In Italy, for example, Black Friday falls outside the season’s strictly defined schedule for when the winter sales can be held. This year, sales cannot be held from Dec. 5 until Jan. 4, when stores are allowed to clear out stock. The fashion industry has warned that can hurt smaller retailers in a country that relies heavily on them.

A French legislative committee passed an amendment Monday that proposes prohibiting Black Friday because it causes “resource waste” and “overconsumption.” France’s e-commerce union, whose members have been aggressively marketing Black Friday sales throughout November, has condemned the measure.

Dozens of French activists blocked the Amazon warehouse in Bretigny-sur Orge on Thursday, spreading hay and old refrigerators and microwave ovens on the driveway. On Friday, climate activists took aim at Black Friday, blocking shops and setting up heated exchanges with consumers who had been hoping to find a good deal.

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“We need to stop telling ourselves that, ‘It’s Christmas, I need to go shopping,’” says Théophile Pouillot-Chévara, a 17-year-old climate activist in Paris.

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