The Oklahoman

Black Friday on hold in France

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PARIS — France's government on Friday got supermarke­t chains and e-commerce platforms like Amazon to agree to postpone “Black Friday” promotions, responding to concerns that shops shuttered by the nation's coronaviru­s lockdown are hemorrhagi­ng business and could be hurt further if they miss out on the consumer splurge.

Under t he deal brokered by the economy minister, Bruno Le Maire, “Black Friday” in France will now be pushed back by a week to Dec. 4, with the understand­ing that lockdown-shuttered businesses will have been allowed to reopen by then.

The ministry said support for the delay ended up being unanimous among commerce, e-commerce and supermarke­t representa­tives who took part in two days of talks. It said a “spirit of responsibi­lity and solidarity” prevailed.

Wit h t h e l o c k d o wn starting to bring France's latest virus surge back under control, the government is facing pressure to allow businesses closed as “non-essential” to reopen. But it is also mindful of the risk of infections speeding up again if restrictio­ns are lifted too soon, too quickly. The approach of “Black Friday,” originally scheduled for Nov. 27 in France, had brought the dilemma to a head.

P o s t p o n i n g “B l a c k Friday” until real-world s t o r e s have r e o pened would allow them to also profi t f r om consumer spending on cut- price goods ahead of Christmas.

The director of Amazon France, Frederic Duval, told France Info radio on Friday before the meeting that the e-commerce distributo­r was ready to sign up to a delay. Its “Black Friday” promotions will be pushed back to Dec. 4, he said. The delay applies only to Amazon France, he added. In several other countries Amazon was launching a week of deals already on Friday.

The focus on “Black Friday” is part of what has become a wider debate in France about the lopsided effects of lockdowns, with businesses deemed “nonessenti­al” forced to close while some big distributo­rs and e-commerce sites have thrived as consumers have shopped online instead.

In a boost to florists, among businesses that found themselves on the “non-essential” list, the government allowed sales of Christmas trees from Friday, granting a lockdown exception to the t r aditional decoration that, arguably, could be regarded as perhaps not strictly essential.

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