Global Times

Consumers shun Black Friday due to virus concern

- By GT staff reporters

As retailers and e- commerce platforms are busy preparing for the Black Friday sale, Chinese consumers, who had an increasing role in the annual US shopping event last year, are holding back since freight- related COVID- 19 cases have seen signs of rising.

“The discounts are huge, which is really attractive, but I'm truly afraid of the risks of contaminat­ion, especially as the overseas pandemic, especially in the US, has seen no signs of easing,” Zhu Hong, a Shanghai- based white- collar worker, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Zhu's concerns are shared by many Chinese consumers. On China's Twitter- like social media Sina Weibo, a topic called “Reduce overseas purchases” ranks on the trending list. The topic calls on netizens to reduce or stop overseas purchases during the winter, since low temperatur­es make the virus spread faster.

Many netizens agreed with the post, saying they will wait for next year's discounts to avoid potential infection risks.

Parcels from overseas countries do have the risk of contaminat­ion with the COVID- 19 virus, Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiolo­gist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a previous interview, urging consumers to clean outer packages with disinfecti­ng wipes.

The rising concerns also come after more locally transmitte­d COVID- 19 cases on Monday, including employees of UPS and FedEx, all of whom are connected to previous infections among freight workers in Shanghai.

Sun Xiaodong, deputy director of the Shanghai Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a press conference on Monday that the confirmed local cases reported on November 9 and 10 were both exposed to one contaminat­ed air cargo container.

Last year, Chinese consumers showed great interest in this US

shopping festival.

Data provided by Alibaba showed that on the first day of the Black Friday holiday shopping last year on its Tmall platform, sales were more than 66 percent higher than the previous year.

The event involves more than 2,500 brands from more than 70 markets, including Europe, the US, Japan and South Korea, according to a statement Alibaba sent to the Global Times.

E- commerce platforms prepared for this year's promotion over the past few weeks. Suning told the Global Times that it has joined with hundreds of brands globally during this shopping season, noting that it has more than 1,000 profession­al overseas buying teams, to explore the best products in more than 102 countries and regions for Chinese consumers.

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