No parking, five or six different stores, less variety (try getting a mango in the local green grocers), and every chance that you won't be able to catch them open until the following weekend if you worked.
But apparently this was what locals 'really wanted' .....
These Are Happy Now? |
.... until Tesco built the store anyway, and suddenly there were no locals protesting (presumably the activists from the SWP had got bored and gone 'home'), and everyone was actually quite happy at the 'convenience' of having a 'convenience store' on the high-street.
They provided points of retail stability on an often fragile high street, which was under threat of encroachment by the real enemy, the 'charity store' ....
But now, the high water mark of Tesco's presence on the high street has apparently been reached, and the retail giant (still with 29% market share), is retreating as the great king Canute of tidal events, hubris, has brought it low. It has now announced the biggest loss in its history as it writes down its property portfolio, and as well as cancelling plans for new stores, is now closing a large number of its less profitable stores, most of which are those opened in places where 'locals' apparently didn't want them in the first place.
Cue peals of bells and proclamations of freedom! ... hardly. The real locals are aghast .... the 'activist locals' are nowhere to be seen ....
So now, somewhat ironically we are being treated to wails of despair by those same locals (but the real ones this time we suspect), as jobs go, money is taken out of the high street, small councils lose business rates money, and the 'high streets' are put at risk of 'tumble weed' rolling down them .... just a sea of charity shops with under-age teen single parents pushing a rolling wall of baby buggies along them.
Undoubtedly we will see the discounters (Aldi, Lidl and Netto), take up some of the slack and even occupy some of the buildings, but there will be some local communities that will find their lives negatively impacted.
There is a lesson in all this ... never let activists from outside, hijack your communities interests. If they don't represent your views, then let them know ... get at them, because they don't care a toss about you, just their own political agendas. Most communities were actually served well by the retail revolution led by Tesco ... local jobs, clean well displayed products, with a wide variety of goods and services, usually with parking.
Now their removal isn't being met by angry and violent protests, just sad resignation as those the 'activists' claimed to represent, are abandoned as last years news. Tesco are Damned if They do and Damned if they don't .... but there will be many who wish that they had.
It isn't just local protesters; Tesco are apparently hated by their suppliers who are put under enormous pressure to lower their prices and many have gone out of business as a result.
ReplyDeleteOf course it was more rent-a-protest, than local protestors in most cases. Locals will have lost an amenity and employment when Tesco goes.
DeleteBig Business can be ruthless .... of course if suppliers banded together they could blacklist Tesco. However they would rather a rival went bust than work together. That's Capitalism for you, Red in tooth and claw!
However one look at Cuba and Venezuela shows you that Socialism is even worse ....
When I heard stories of squeezed suppliers I did wonder why they didn't get together and negotiate better deals, but at what point does it become anti-competitive and illegal?
DeleteNot sure. If they just chose not to trade with Tesco but made no demands, it would be free trade and not anti-competitive. Tesco would presumably either just shrug it off, or be forced to offer better terms.
DeleteJust for completeness here is the Tesco store closures list in full:
ReplyDeleteBearwood Express store
Belvedere Express store
Church Street Ballymena Express store
Heaton Chapel Express store
Heybridge Essex Express store
Houghton Regis Express store
Liverpool Kensington Express store
Longbridge Road Barking Express store
Northfield Birmingham Express store
Raymouth Lane Worksop Express store
Sheffield Manor Express store
South Tottenham High Road Express store
Tredegar Express store
Troon Express store
Walsall Wood Express store
Wealdstone Express store
Whitley Bay Express store
York Road Hartlepool Express store
Bicester Metro store
Bootle Metro store
Caerphilly Metro store
Crossgates Metro store
Devizes Metro store
Grangemouth Metro store
Mexborough Metro store
Morecambe Metro store
Ormskirk Metro store
Runcorn Metro store
Smethwick Metro store
Woodseats Metro store
Bedlington Superstore
Chatham Superstore
Connswater Superstore
Cregagh Road, Belfast Superstore
Doncaster Superstore
Kirkcaldy Superstore
Wrexham Dodds Lane Superstore
Bristol Cribbs Homeplus
Chelmsford Homeplus
Chester Homeplus
Edinburgh Homeplus
Southampton Homeplus
Staines Homeplus