Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#91
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Calif Bill wrote:
Former Swiss customer of mine was one of the largest newspaper typesetting equipment suppliers in Europe. That's nice. Look at the numbers: services accounts for about double the percentage of "industry" in the Swiss economy, and a substantial part of "industry" is service anyway. Bill "Jonathan Ball" wrote in message link.net... Don White wrote: Who's the twit? You. http://www.about.ch/economy/index.html#CH_Eco_Sectors Looks like they have a metal and machine industry plus the watch, pocketknife and textile industries. They are not primarily a manufacturing economy. Services account for nearly double the value of "industry", and not all of the "industry" category is manufacturing. http://www.indexmundi.com/switzerlan...by_sector.html |
#92
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Geee, they need to try harder, you'd think if they are as evil as people
here claim, they should have 7/7 of the market rather than a measly 1/7... "Calif Bill" wrote in message hlink.net... I guess Wal-mart is falling on hard times. The business report for sales on Friday for the Country was an amazing $7.5 Billion. A record. Wal-mart only took in $1.5 Billion is sales. About 1/7 of all the Xmas shopping done the day after Thanksgiving. |
#93
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I guess Wal-mart is falling on hard times. The business report for sales on
Friday for the Country was an amazing $7.5 Billion. A record. Wal-mart only took in $1.5 Billion is sales. About 1/7 of all the Xmas shopping done the day after Thanksgiving. That report indicates business at WalMart is up. WalMart has been taking in 1/8 of all non-automotive retail dollars spent in the US. Moving up to 1/7 is "progress" :-( |
#94
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 05:35:01 +0000, Jonathan Ball wrote:
Calif Bill wrote: Former Swiss customer of mine was one of the largest newspaper typesetting equipment suppliers in Europe. That's nice. Look at the numbers: services accounts for about double the percentage of "industry" in the Swiss economy, and a substantial part of "industry" is service anyway. I would suggest that does make them a manufacturing economy. That breakdown is equivalent to Germany's, and only slightly less than Japan's. We on the other hand are a service economy. Germany: industry 33.4%, agriculture 2.8%, services 63.8% (1999) Japan: agricultu 1.4% industry: 30.9% services: 67.7% (2001 est.) USA: agricultu 2% industry: 18% services: 80% (2002) Numbers taken from CIA Factbook: http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/ |
#96
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#97
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#99
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"RJ" wrote in message
m... A store with most of the mundane things you need day to day to run your household. One stop to buy a wide variety of things. Open late, as much as 24/7. How is that not a concept? Any decent supermarket chain carries all those things. They have plumbing supplies, tools, and clothing like WM? I'd venture a guess that most folks don't buy hardware on every shopping trip, unless they're in the middle of a project. And, it seems we have different definitions of "the mundane things". To me, that meant "things I buy every single week". Yeah...if you're fixing your sink, hardware is mundane, compared to a Rolex watch. They'll charge you a bit more for Rubbermaid storage containers, but in return, they'll have produce that wasn't driven over by the truck. You have a real hard-on for Walmart. Uh oh. This sounds like a discussion of politics. Man sees something ugly, reports it, other man figures it was a false report because first man had an attitude. So: I walk into WM and find I can't buy lettuce because everything they have looks like lettuce you'd left in your own refrigerator for too long. I go to a grocery store and find 4 kinds of lettuce, 95% of it in really nice condition. I'm hallucinating??? Handle winter squash roughly and it'll survive. Do the same with tender vegetables and the product is worthless except as compost. Based on what I see, WM doesn't train its people to handle produce correctly. In a perfect world, only gardeners would be hired to work with produce. Until then, stores have to train their people. Finally, I notice in two WM stores here that about 1/3 of the groceries don't have unit pricing stickers on the shelves. That's another reason customers think they're getting a low price. Unless you walk around with a calculator, it's tricky to compare two jars of salsa, on of which contains 17.38 oz and the other 32.50 oz. Real grocery stores here have unit pricing on everything, and it's NOT required by law in this county. |
#100
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
hlink.net... I guess Wal-mart is falling on hard times. The business report for sales on Friday for the Country was an amazing $7.5 Billion. A record. Wal-mart only took in $1.5 Billion is sales. About 1/7 of all the Xmas shopping done the day after Thanksgiving. I'm not disputing the fact that they sell a lot. I'm saying that for many products, they are NOT cheaper. They've just created an image. Tell me this: Faced with a 5 mile commercial strip packed with weekend traffic, are you going to go back and forth between WM and two supermarkets to determine whether you're getting the best prices? Of course not. This is what WM counts on. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Economy Rebounds - Productivity Soars, Jobless Claims Drop | General |