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Friday, 26 January 2018

Supermarket vs wet market

    I taught a general education course in the first semester of 2008. Students collected data and information, and presented their projects in class. I would need to evaluate their works and give some comments. These projects were rather interesting. I learned a lot from them. I stopped teaching general education since 2013 until this year I will teach a similar course again. I look forward to a fruitful experience from this course and my new students. 
   My experience in 2008 is indeed very fruitful. I also wrote several articles at that time, my students in that course gave me different inspirations. I knew more about what laymen thought about social issues and I used my economics knowledge to add a perspective to these issues. At that time, I did not have a blog. Now, I have and would like to share with you my thoughts at that time. If my teaching experience this year gives me further inspirations, I may continue to write some more in relation to this general-education course. 
   One topic that often appeared in the course was supermarket. Students wanted to explain why supermarkets are increasingly popular. Their explanations are good and I just want to point out there are some factors behind the factors that they identified.
   Why supermarkets are taking over the role of traditional wet markets? Some factors are identified by my students. Longer business period is one of them. Clearly it is more convenient to shop in supermarkets offering a more flexible time for customers. Wet markets are notorious for its limited business time. Shopping after 7:00pm is almost impossible. Students went on to discuss the pros and cons of wet markets. Wet markets are selling fresh food and so they need to make sure foods are sold out everyday. Stores won't acquire too many fresh foods therefore. No wonder business will stop because housewives have bought all the fresh foods well before 7. Although wet markets are not convenient, they have their advantages. Personal relationships between store owners and housewives are better. In contrast, in supermarkets, you never know the salespersons.
   It is a rather standard method in doing a project by listing the pros and cons independently. My economics instinct (or bias), however, always prompts me to, and suggests students to, think things behind. Firstly, longer business hours are an advantage to customers. But it is costly to the businessmen, including supermarket operators. If there is no corresponding demand for it, profit-seeking firms won't offer this opportunity to its customers. Think of a society where all customers are full-time housewives who have flexible time for shopping. Shopping after 7 generates some more convenience to housewives but late shopping is not a necessity for them. As people are usually having their dinners at 6 to 7, they shop well before 7. After 7 is surely a low time for business. So, why should supermarkets provide fresh food after 7? The answer is that demand after 7 exists (and not all customers are full-time housewives). There are now lots more working females (and also working males) who still need to shop and prepare dinners for their families. Their time for shopping is not flexible and can only be conducted after work. Furthermore, people's working hours are becoming longer over time, which means time for shopping extends further beyond 7.
   Secondly, if a good personal relationship between store owners and clients is an advantage of wet markets, why the market share of wet markets is still declining? The answer is that this advantage is not as important as before. Again, some social changes explain things behind. One relevant change is that products are increasingly standardized while quality assurances are provided at different levels. For example, the government will check the quality of food through various channels. In the old days where qualities are not assured and products are not standardized, having a good relationship with those who know the quality is important. Store owners are such experts. Not only customers want the store owners to give them good advice or even retain a good-quality product for them. Store owners also want their customers to believe in their advice. If customers don't believe in them, they will shop at other stores. When you can't easily tell which one is the good businessman, you believe in those who maintain good and long-term relationship with you. So, wet-market personal relationship is important when quality assurance and standardization is not popular. But this is not as important as before when things have changed.
   Therefore, my advice to my students is that you can try to think of the reasons behind the pros and cons of supermarkets versus wet markets. There might be some forces governing the positive and negative factors that you have identified. And the forces are a result of changes in the whole society (increase in working females, longer working hours, standardization, etc.). But I won't require them to accept the substance of my analyses offered above.
   Economists have a “bad” habit. They always want to think things behind. Sometimes it simply destroys the romantic elements in things (such as the warm personal relationship between store owners and housewives). And they are sometimes biased and always think there are some cost-pushed and demand-pulled factors behind any everyday life issues. Even so, I think economics is still useful in offering one (different) perspective in interpreting issues although I don't think everything should only be interpreted from a single (economic) perspective.

5 comments:

  1. Inspiring article!
    Old generation prefers wet market more due to their sufficient time, purchasing habit and long-lasting relationship with store owners for company. However, for new generation, supermarket and online shopping seems a better choice for them due to its convenience and flexibility in both time and distance. Online retailers selling fresh and raw food are also popular among the new generation, especially white collars. The past years witnessed the gradual disappearance of the wet market. The remaining wet market serves more as a cultural symbol for the town or city. I wonder after decades, the the new generation replaces the old generation, will the wet market in developed city just be kept in the museum? Is there any functions of wet market that can not been replaced?
    Again, thank you for extensive reading!!!

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    1. Thanks for your comment. You have also raised a new point that is relevant, but has not been handled, in my article: online shopping. Yes, as what supermarket has been gradually replacing wet market, online shopping may more or less replace supermarket somehow someday. How far and fast that will happen awaits further observation. All these trends can be attributed to some changes in fundamental factors in a society, and can be analyzed.
      When I wrote the article, online shopping was not that popular. I guess the same group of students, if they worked on a project today, may discuss online shopping instead of supermarket.
      I think you have made a very good point.

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  2. Government struggles to combine the online shopping and bricks-and-mortar stores in a harmonious way instead of pushing virtual economy forwards blindly. Obviously, there is a conflict between the virtual economy and the physical economy, but at the same time, many similarities. Will the principles in the traditional economy still applicable to the new form of economy?

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    1. In short, some principles in old economies apply but some do not. When the so-called new economies (online commercial worlds) first appeared around 1990s, there were speculations in the economics circle that the economics that had been developed so far might no longer be applicable in the new economies. But over time, I guess, more economists (now) believe that the economic theories developed so far are still useful (though should be adjusted somehow). "Network effect" and "increasing returns" are very key concepts in the new economies but not so prominently in old economies. Nonetheless, both concepts have been developed well before internet was created. What the new generations of economists need to do is to expand and develop some existing concepts and to apply them into the new world. I am not an expert in new economy but subject like "IT and economy" exists. The whole subject is concerned with how to apply economics concept into analyzing new economic order.

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  3. Luckily, my major is FinTech. Maybe I will further study in this field. Thank you for getting new ideas from your blog. Looking forward to your next inspiring article.

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