Saturday, November 8, 2008

"``With the recession, people are starting to be more conscious of what they wear,''

Here's a great idea. Why don't we begin in January? From Bloomberg:

"Dublin's Early Christmas Lights Fail to Ease High Street Gloom

By Louisa Nesbitt

Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Christmas is coming early to Dublin this year as city officials try to dispel the gloom from the country's first recession in two decades.

Mayor Eibhlin Byrne will switch on the Irish capital's festive lights display on Nov. 9, before cities such as London, New York and Edinburgh, after bringing the ceremony forward by three weeks from last year.

``For retailers, it's not an easy time,'' said Byrne. ``We are harking back to John F. Kennedy and we are asking not what your city can do for you but what you can do for your city.''

Irish shoppers powered the fastest-growing economy in Western Europe over the last five years. Now, consumers are cutting spending as unemployment rises and property prices slump. Gerry Harvey, chairman of Sydney-based electronics and furniture retailer Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd., which has four Dublin stores, described Ireland's economy as ``a basket case.''

``They are putting on the lights early to make people spend their money,'' said Margaret O'Hara, 70, browsing on Henry Street, one of the city's main shopping boulevards. ``The shops are not doing business. There's no bustle there.''

Here's a bit more:

"Be a Patriot

The Irish didn't confine themselves to home, either. Last year, 291,000 Irish shoppers traveled to New York, spending about 500 million euros, according to Dublin-based lobby group, the Irish Small and Medium Enterprises Association.

``Show a little bit of patriotism,'' said Byrne. ``There is no point saying `I love Dublin' but shopping in New York.''

As part of a campaign to keep shoppers spending in Dublin, businesses in the city are spending 1 million euros on Christmas lights, including an 18-meter, five-ton structure made up of 100,000 bulbs on O'Connell Street, Dublin's main thoroughfare. Not everyone backs the decision.

``I hate to see Christmas trees going up too early,'' said Louis Copeland, who runs five men's clothing stores in Dublin. ``Christmas always happens, there's no reason it won't happen this year.'

The slowdown is benefiting at least some Irish retailers. Copeland, who lines his store walls with photos of celebrity clients including actor Kevin Spacey, says sales are recovering after falling by as much as 20 percent in May.

``With the recession, people are starting to be more conscious of what they wear,''said Copeland. ``For a while, people were dressing down, everyone got sloppy.''

The last comment befuddles me.

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