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- <text id=94TT1198>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Commerce:Shopping Spoken Here
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COMMERCE, Page 58
- Shopping Spoken Here
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A weak dollar and efficient buying tours have made the U.S.
- the favorite bargain basement of tourists
- </p>
- <p>By Frederick Painton--Reported by Greg Aunapu/Sunrise, Satsuki Oba/Tokyo, Stacy Perman/New
- York and Leslie Whitaker/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> It may be a dubious honor for the last remaining superpower,
- but the U.S. can now claim to be the bargain basement of the
- world. Signs of this distinction are everywhere this summer--atop the Empire State Building, for instance, where Klaus
- Graumann, 27, a molecular biologist from Austria, is snapping
- pictures with his just acquired Olympus camera, wearing jeans,
- a polo shirt and running shoes also bought during his visit.
- "We say, `O.K., we've seen the museums. Let's get a sandwich
- and go to the department store,'" notes Graumann.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has long been one of the world's most popular tourist
- destinations, as much for its open spaces as for its cut-rate
- prices on such goods as consumer electronics and sneakers. But
- this year foreign visitors are being lured in near record numbers
- by the very weak dollar, which has made good deals even better,
- and by the new efficiency with which American packaged-tour
- companies move tourists in and out of stores. Rock-bottom retail
- prices--anywhere from 30% to 70% less than those in Europe
- and Asia--are expected to bring some 47 million visitors to
- the U.S. this year, compared with 45.8 million last year. They
- will leave behind an estimated $79 billion, according to the
- U.S. Travel and Tourism Administration--up from $74 billion
- last year.
- </p>
- <p> Every week thousands arrive with empty suitcases ready to be
- filled. As a result, the U.S., with a trade deficit that grew
- $130 million in the past 12 months, has come to appreciate what
- other countries learned long ago: that an influx of foreign
- tourists may not always be convenient, but it does put money
- in the bank. Compared with American tourists abroad, visitors
- to the U.S. stay longer and spend more money at each stop: an
- average of 12.2 nights and $1,624, vs. the Americans' four nights
- and $298.
- </p>
- <p> Airlines have begun to cater specifically to the itinerant bargain
- hunters. Between October and March, Northwest Airlines offered
- a "Shop Till You Drop" tour that flew Britons and Japanese to
- the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, a 4.2 million-sq.-ft.
- behemoth with 420 stores. On the plan for the Britons, single-minded
- consumers boarded a plane in London late Friday afternoon, got
- to Minneapolis Saturday morning, shopped all day and arrived
- back in London early Sunday. "We compared a dozen items--perfumes,
- blue jeans, fancy stationery items like Montblanc pens--bought
- at the Mall of America to what you would pay in London," says
- Doug Killian of Northwest's public relations department, "and
- the difference was nearly enough to pay for the entire package."
- </p>
- <p> At Sawgrass Mills near Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which at 2.2
- million sq. ft. claims to be "the world's largest outlet mall,"
- a third of the 17.5 million annual visitors are foreign tourists.
- On a typical summer day 13 busloads arrive, spending an average
- of $200 to $300 a person in as little as 90 minutes. Tours are
- met by trilingual greeters who hand out shopping bags. The mall
- provides a foreign-currency exchange counter for anyone who
- needs more money fast. Says Jay Santos, vice president of ACC
- Tours, which shepherds 100,000 international visitors a year:
- "We have to rent U-Haul trucks to carry the purchases behind
- the buses, and we always rent one or two extra hotel rooms per
- busload of visitors just for the packages."
- </p>
- <p> Despite worldwide headlines about its grisly crimes and other
- urban horrors, New York City still ranks No. 1 with foreign
- tourists, and savvy department stores eagerly exploit the city's
- popularity. Foreign shoppers are so cherished at Bloomingdale's
- that the department store established an international service
- desk last year to provide customers with personal shopping assistants
- fluent in 30 languages and, if necessary, with help arranging
- to ship purchases home. Says Adrienne Cleere, vice president
- of international marketing: "There can be no more lucrative
- and profitable shoppers. They don't return merchandise, they're
- not as sale conscious, and they buy more name-brand goods."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the biggest shopping binge of the summer was carried
- out in Los Angeles by Brazil's World Cup team. The newly crowned
- champions and their entourage, exuberant from a 3-2 penalty
- shoot-out victory over Italy in nearby Pasadena, hauled home
- some 12 tons of large-screen television sets, computers, fax
- machines, microwave ovens, dishwashers--and even a leather
- saddle. Their flight from Los Angeles was delayed four hours
- because loading took much longer than expected, and on arrival
- in Rio de Janeiro five trucks were needed to carry the stuff
- away. When Brazilian customs ordered the team members to declare
- their excess baggage--citizens are permitted to bring as much
- as $500 worth into the country duty free--the players refused
- and threatened to boycott the victory parade. Brazil's tax czar,
- Osiris Lopes Filho, insisted on collecting what was initially
- estimated as $1 million in customs duties. When he was overruled
- by President Itamar Franco, Lopes resigned. "Nobody can be above
- the law," he said. But for merchants counting their money back
- in the U.S., the incident was a perfect advertisement for an
- America that has turned millions of foreign tourists into shopping
- champions.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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