Buying things on AliExpress

Screenshot of the AliExpress home page

I’ve been using AliExpress to buy occasional items since last summer. For those not already familiar, AliExpress is an online marketplace, where various businesses can sell products direct to consumers. The majority of the businesses on the platform are based in China, and it’s very similar to Shein and Temu in this regard. In my experience, AliExpress tends to focus more on technology, but its sellers offer a wide variety of things.

Before I continue, a disclosure. I’m a member of Amazon Associates, and so whenever you buy something from Amazon having followed a link from this blog, I get a small amount of commission. AliExpress is an Amazon competitor, and I do not get any commission from AliExpress. That being said, you can use this referral link if you want.

Shipping times

The big difference between buying from AliExpress (or Shein, or Temu) when compared with, say, Amazon, is the shipping times. The products you buy from AliExpress are usually shipped, on demand, directly from China. This means that orders to the UK typically take a week to arrive, if they’re in stock.

You do get regular shipping updates, both by email and in the AliExpress app, telling you when your items have been dispatched, arrived in your country, cleared customs and are finally out for delivery. It’s worth noting that, once in the UK, orders are generally delivered by Evri (aka Hermes). Whilst we seem to have a good local Evri courier at present, I’ve also had horror stories in the past, so bear this in mind.

Another thing to watch out for is extended delivery times. I’ve bought items where the expected delivery time has been measured in weeks rather than days, and this wasn’t obvious prior to payment.

Choice items

Many items for sale on AliExpress carry a ‘Choice’ flag. If you buy enough of these at once, then you get free delivery. What this means – I think – is that the individual sellers will send their products to a central dispatch point, where they’re collected together, put into a larger padded envelope, and sent internationally as one package.

Unlike Amazon, who mostly use cardboard for their packages, expect to receive lots of hard-to-recycle plastic packaging when your order arrives. And while we’re talking about the environment, bear in mind that your order will most likely be shipped by air, and so incurs significant carbon emissions. By contrast, products shipped by boat to a UK warehouse before sale will have incurred lower emissions on the whole.

Prices

Because you’re buying directly from sellers in China, the prices are usually lower than anywhere else. Typically, I’ve seen the same items costing 50% more on Amazon than on AliExpress. Note that some prices exclude VAT, so when you get to the checkout, don’t be surprised to see your total go up by around 20%.

Coins

Coins are the currency AliExpress uses for its loyalty scheme. Once you have an account, then performing various actions whilst using the AliExpress app (and specifically the app, not the web site) rewards you coins. This can be as simple as opening the Coins page of the app each day, or writing a review. There are also games within the app that you can play for coins.

When you buy products, you may be able to redeem some of your coins against the total cost. You probably won’t be able to pay for a whole order with coins, but it may knock a few pence off. I currently have 866 coins as I write this, which should amount to approximately £6.78.

I’m guessing the whole idea with coins is that you’re tempted into opening the app regularly, and so are tempted into buying more things.

Discount events

AliExpress has regular events where discounts are available. These are either coupons, e.g. save £5 if you spend £30, or discounts on products. Usually, there’s a discount on Choice items on the first day of the month, for example.

Helpfully, AliExpress sometimes indicates if a product will be cheaper in the near future. Usually, the difference is just a few pence, but it’s worth noting if you don’t need an item urgently. And, let’s face it, if you’re already expecting to wait a week for delivery, a few more days to save a little may be worth the wait.

The best things I’ve bought from AliExpress

I’ve reviewed a number of items that I’ve bought from AliExpress over the past year or so, but certainly not everything. Of those that I have reviewed, here’s a list:

I’ve also picked up a MagSafe power bank, that I use regularly, a colour changing Zigbee smart bulb, and a USB-C to 2.5mm audio jack adaptor. I’ve bought multiple sets of cheap Lenovo ThinkPlus wireless earbuds, so that I have a set in each bag that I use regularly and so am never without headphones. They won’t win any audiophile awards, but they’re good enough.

The best bargain was something that we bought for our nine-year-old, to help with one of their disabilities. It cost £20, versus £150 for an almost identical product from a specialist UK disability store that we also had to buy.

On one of the Home Assistant Facebook groups I’m in, another member said that he doesn’t buy anything from AliExpress that can be plugged into the mains, for safety reasons. Indeed, of the things I’ve bought, only the smart bulb, and a couple of Zigbee smart plugs, are things that can be plugged into the mains. I’ve not had any issues with any of them, but I think it’s a good rule to follow. It’s certainly possible to pick up items from AliExpress that shouldn’t be legally sold in the UK, because they’re not compliant with our safety laws. This is true of most marketplace platforms, including Amazon.

…and the things I’ve regretted

Not every purchase has been worthwhile. I reviewed this six port USB car charger in March; since then, some of the plastic has come off, and I don’t use it anymore. That’s mainly because our new car has ample built-in USB ports and so it’s no longer necessary, but I don’t know if I’d feel safe using it now either way.

There was a USB charger cable that looked like a three-tailed whip, featuring USB-C, Lightning and micro-USB ports on one end and a USB-A port on the other. It claimed to offer 100 W charging, although my understanding of how USB-A works means that’s arguably impossible. It’s certainly not met my expectations, although I still use it, and it cost barely more than £1.

I also bought a tyre pressure monitoring system, with smart dust caps – again, for our old car. The monitoring unit was solar powered, and was designed to stick to a window. The glue on the sticky pads quickly failed and so the monitoring unit regularly ran out of power.

Whilst I had regrets about all of these, collectively they add up to about £15 of wasted money.

A trip to the Company Shop

A screenshot of the home page of the Company Shop web site

Shortly before Christmas, I popped in to the Company Shop in Bradford, and picked up a basket of groceries for only £8.

Company Shop is a surplus supermarket, and sells discounted groceries sourced from excess stock from other supermarkets. Inside, you’ll see some branded products, and also own-label products from the likes of Ocado, Lidl, Tesco and Asda. Stock ends up at the Company Shop either because mainstream supermarkets have over-ordered, or because they have large quantities of stock which is very close to its use by date.

Consequently, what’s on offer can vary widely from day to day. Most fresh produce tends to be short-dated, so ideally things that need to be cooked and/or eaten the same day. So it’s handy to pop in on a day when you can be open-minded about what to cook for dinner that day. However, it’s not a supermarket where you can rely on a fixed shopping list. For example, there was plenty of cheese on sale when I went, but it was small blocks of fancy cheese with added fruit and not plain cheddar for cooking with.

Other reasons why stock makes it to the Company Shop include:

  • The packaging is slightly damaged, so expect to see plenty of dented cans of things. If that doesn’t bother you, then you can pick up some real bargains.
  • Products from failed, missed or returned deliveries.

Some food is sold frozen, and there are also homewares on offer as well as food.

Locations

There are currently 13 Company Shop outlets across England and Scotland. The majority of these are across the north of England and the midlands, as, like Greggs Outlets, they’re concentrated in areas with low incomes. There isn’t a Company Shop in London, for example, and the only store in the south is in Southampton. Back in November, a Metro reporter went to the Southampton store and wrote about her experience.

Company Shop membership

As with Mordor and Costco, one does not simply walk into the Company Shop. You need to be a member, and, like Costco, there are eligibility requirements. I was able to join through my employer, and many public sector and charity workers should be eligible. You can also join if you are in receipt of certain means-tested benefits, such as Universal Credit. The whole ethos of Company Shop is about widening access to groceries to those from low incomes, so unlike Costco, membership is free.

Members can bring a limited number of family and friends along with them, and can share their membership with up to two other people who do not necessarily need to meet the eligibility criteria.

On my visit, I picked up two boxes of my usual breakfast cereal, two litres of long-life lactose free milk (good until April), some onions, oranges and potatoes, some short-dated crisps and some dishwasher rinse aid. Like I said, all that came to around £8 – indeed, the crisps were 10p for a bag of six.

Whilst we’re a fairly high income household, I’m sure we’ll drop in to the Company Shop every now and again when we’re in the area with the car. We picked up some genuine bargains there, and, most importantly, all the food got used. And that’s better than it all going to waste.

Patronage! At the Costco

A screenshot of the Costco web site showing their store finder. There's a map with pins showing the location of their warehouses across northern England

Something that has been on my to-do list for a while was to join Costco, the American ‘big box’ members-only wholesale retailer where you can buy items cheaply in bulk. Although primarily aimed at trade buyers, individuals belonging to some professions can also join their membership scheme. And, last week, I finally got around to joining after they visited my workplace.

Costco isn’t particularly new to UK, with the first of their warehouses opening here in the mid-1990s. Our local warehouses are in Leeds (near Crown Point), and just off the M60 near Oldham. We went to the Leeds one.

Inside a Costco warehouse

Costco calls its stores ‘warehouses’ and it’s an apt description. It’s a bit like the warehouse bit at the end of Ikea, where what you need is on pallets, and the shelving goes way up beyond customers’ reach to store excess stock. It had a similar feel to the hypermarkets that you get in France such as Auchan and Grand Casino, albeit with much higher shelving.

As well as shelves full of products, services offered in store include a butcher’s, an optician’s, a takeaway food stall, and tire fitting for your car. There’s also usually a fuel station, offering discounted fuel – again, for members only.

Almost everything is available in much larger quantities than you would expect at a standard supermarket. Either because they’re sold as multipacks, or just in bigger packaging. All prices are displayed without VAT added; where VAT applies, the VAT inclusive price is written in smaller lettering. After all, Costco is primarily a wholesaler selling to businesses.

Range

What you probably won’t find is a huge range of products. Costco generally sells one brand for each item, and, as it’s aimed at traders, this tends to be branded items. This means that, even with a bulk discount, items may not always be cheaper than supermarket own brands. That being said, Costco does offer its Kirkwood brand for some items like packaged meat and toilet rolls.

Being an American supermarket, some of the meat on sale is imported from the USA. American meat isn’t commonly sold in UK supermarkets and it’s the first time I’ve knowingly seen it on sale here. Generally, wherever American meat is on offer, there will be British meat alongside. American meat is cheaper, but also tends to come in much larger quantities. I have to say that I thought that the British meat looked to be better quality. I also have my issues with how animals are reared on American farms, as their welfare standards aren’t comparable with Britain and Europe.

Some of the things we bought on our first visit included 40 rolls of toilet paper (actually 10 packs of 4 rolls), huge bottles of Heinz ketchup and 24 can pallets of Cherry Pepsi Max and Orangina.

Costco Membership

You have to be a member to shop at Costco, either online or in store. Anyone can register and pay for an online account, but if you’re an individual, there are eligibility criteria that you need to meet to be able to shop in store. Current prices are here; including VAT, a standard individual membership is around £34 per year and an Executive membership is around £75. Executive members get an additional 2% off their Costco spending, so if you go regularly, it could work out cheaper. I reckon you would need to spend an average of around £170 per month at Costco for it to be worthwhile.

It’s worth noting that the membership cards are not supposed to be transferable, so the named person needs to be there to enter the store. As standard, you get a card for yourself, and a second card for a spouse (so both Christine and I have one each). You can then add one additional person to your account; this costs extra but would be less than a separate individual membership. Besides cardholders, members can bring a maximum of two guests with them on a shopping trip. I suspect that we’ll be offering to bring friends with us in future, so that we can buy in bulk and then split up our purchases later. If you’re a real-life friend of mine and you’re reading this, yes, that means you – contact me and we’ll try to arrange something.

In terms of eligibility, I qualify as I work in the education industry, and Christine works in healthcare so she qualifies too.

Prices

The prices are pretty good. For example, the aforementioned 24 can pallet of Cherry Pepsi Max was £8.38 including VAT (£6.99 without). Tesco sells an equivalent quantity for £10.50 and although I have seen offers as low as £8 from time to time, it’s a good price. They also don’t have ‘multipack can, not to be sold separately’ written across the top.

Vanish stain remover cost us £11.38 (£9.49 excluding VAT) for 1.9 kg; Tesco want £11.25 for a smaller 1.35 kg box. And we got two 880g bottles of Heinz Tomato Ketchup for £6.99 (VAT exempt), instead of £4.50 from Tesco.

But, like I said, most products are branded. We didn’t buy any herbs or spices because we could get them much cheaper at one of our local Asian supermarkets, and I can get own-brand cereal much cheaper at Lidl. Also, there were some things that we didn’t buy because of the quantities. For example, you can’t just buy one tin of kidney beans, you have to buy at least 24. Which is great if you’re regularly cooking chilli con carne, but otherwise is a lot of food to have to store. We’re lucky that we have a cellar and can put bulky items there until needed, but if you don’t have lots of storage, this could be a problem.

So, should you consider a Costco membership? If you can shop often enough to make the membership cost worth it, sure. Individual membership works out at around £3 per month and we saved more than that in one visit, although you also need to factor in travel costs.

Elsecar Heritage Centre

Elsecar Heritage Centre

Because I’m still woefully behind in writing up about our days out, today I’m going to talk about the Elsecar Heritage Centre, which we visited over 6 months ago. It’s in the village of Elsecar, near Barnsley in South Yorkshire, and is a part of the village that has been preserved to look much as it would in the 19th century.

The centre includes many ex-industrial buildings. However, rather than being a static museum, most of the buildings are now leased out, and now host an array of craft shops. The main building, in the photo, is now a soft-play gym, which I think our two-year-old very much appreciated.

Elsecar Heritage Centre

Around the back of the site is the Elsecar Heritage Railway, which runs for a short distance using heritage trains. You can have a look at some of the locomotives and carriages in the yard, and there’s a station with services running at weekends.

We actually picked quite a good day to visit, as there was also a small birds of prey exhibition, and an indoor craft market in one of the larger buildings. We’d also been lucky with the weather, although we had a string of nice weekends last autumn.

That being said, without the extra events, I don’t think it would have been much worth coming to Elsecar on its own – at least, not for the distance we travelled. Whilst there are plenty of information boards around, and it’s nice to look at, it’s not really a full day out. If we were to come again, I think we would need to combine it with something else in the area, such as Cannon Hall Farm.

You can view the photos I took on Flickr, as usual.

Bradford’s Westfield shopping centre is finally happening

Work resumes on the Westfield Bradford development in January 2014

I expect the people of Bradford breathed a sigh of relief when workmen finally returned to the site of Westfield Bradford earlier this month. This will see a new Westfield shopping centre being built, which will be the only one in the north of England (we’ll place Derby in the Midlands).

The shopping centre is due to open in time for Christmas 2015, by which point it will have been almost 12 years in the making. Demolition of the existing buildings on the site started in 2004, and was done by 2006. There followed many months where the remaining rubble was piled up and no activity, but around 2007 preparatory works began to dig a large hole for the foundations.

But after the foundations were constructed, nothing. The credit crunch, and then the recession, put paid to any further progress. The whole project was effectively mothballed. The situation was so bad that in 2010, the local council, with a financial contribution from Westfield, turned part of the park into a ‘temporary urban garden’ as there was no prospect of work starting any time soon.

All this time, the rest of Bradford’s city centre suffered. The recession didn’t help, taking with it a number of shops, but the range and quality of shops in Bradford has declined over the past 10 years. There are a large number of vacant units, and many of those that are occupied are by pop-up shops on short-term lets. There’s also been an explosion of pawnbrokers, payday loan shops and betting shops.

Last year, Trinity Leeds opened in Leeds. Though it too was mothballed for some time during its construction, it’s now open and successful, and has no doubt made Leeds an even more compelling retail destination than Bradford.

Whilst I really hope the opening of Westfield Bradford will be a turning point, and help Bradford get back on its feet, I can’t help but feel that it’s perhaps too late. What if the decline of Bradford’s city centre is actually terminal?

I’m also concerned that Westfield will kill off other parts of the city. Bradford’s existing shopping centre, the Kirkgate Centre, has generally coped well over the years, but has lost a couple of major tenants as some of the larger chain stores went under. Now it too has more than its fair share of poorer quality stores, including a recently extended Poundland. It’s also home to River Island and WHSmith, two confirmed tenants of the new Westfield centre. Marks and Spencer is opposite the Kirkgate Centre and will be an ‘anchor’ tenant in Westfield.

Still, overall I hope that Westdfield is a success. It’s a shame that a once prosperous city like Bradford has fallen so far. Not only has it dropped behind Leeds, but the smaller nearby towns of Halifax and Huddersfield, both of which have (in my opinion) a better range of shops.

App of the Week: Quidco ClickSnap

Quidco is one of the UK’s most popular cashback sites, and one of two that I’m a member of – the other being Top CashBack. Quidco has recently launched an app called ClickSnap, which I’ve been using recently.

Until now, cashback web sites have been entirely online affairs. To qualify, you go to the cashback web site, and then click through a referral link to an online retailer and make a purchase. The cashback site then pays you the referral commission generated from that purchase, rather than keeping it for itself.

The ClickSnap app takes this offline, and into real-world bricks and mortar shops. Once you have downloaded the app to your phone and signed in to your Quidco account, it will show you a list of products that have cashback offers available. This can be filtered by store, as not every offer is available everywhere.

The clever bit happens once you have bought the products. Open the ClickSnap app, and then tap the camera button in the top right-hand corner. To prove that you have bought the products, you use your phone’s camera to take photos of the receipt, showing your purchases. The app will allow you to take multiple shots and stitch them together if it has been a particularly large shop.

Once submitted, it usually takes a couple of days for the cashback to appear in your Quidco account. So far, I’ve used it for four purchases, and received cashback for three of them. You can chase up missing cashback after 14 days if you haven’t received it, but it can never be guaranteed that you will get it. Bear this in mind if you buy something just for the potential money back.

Most of the deals in ClickSnap give you money off the product – usually 20-40 pence – but one actually gave you the full cost back as a rebate. So there’s a pack of Hartley’s Raspberry Jelly in our cupboard that effectively cost me nothing, rather than 44p. Some offers require you to buy combinations of products, such as the Coca-Cola and Walls sausages deal in the screenshot. And not all offers are available at all retailers – again, in the screenshot, one of the deals is only redeemable at Sainsbury’s and another at Asda. There is also a limit of how many times you can redeem the offer – usually three or four times.

You will also find that most of the items that are eligible for cashback are branded items. I tend to buy own-brands and usually they’re cheaper than the branded items, even after cashback.

Because of the small amounts, this is unlikely to save you big bucks, but the potential savings may add up over time. And it may make some premium brands more affordable.

ClickSnap is free, and is available on Android and iOS. A Quidco account is required to use it.

Trinity Leeds

Next month, a new shopping centre will open in Leeds, called Trinity Leeds, after almost six years of construction.

Unlike most shopping malls this isn’t an out of town development; Leeds already has one in the form of the White Rose Centre. Instead, this will take over some under-utilised land in the city centre and open out onto Briggate, a street which ranks in the top 10 busiest in the UK for pedestrian footfall.  When it opens, it will have around 120 shops and will therefore add significant retail capacity to Leeds.

A trinity of shopping centres

Leeds Trinity isn’t all new. Around a third of it is the pre-existing Leeds Shopping Plaza, which used to be called the Bond Street Centre prior to its redevelopment in the 1990s. This has stayed open during the works, albeit with significant disruption.

The rest of the site consisted of two other shopping arcades. The Burton Arcade consisted of shops in the Arcadia group – Topshop, Topman, Burtons and so on. This was built in the 1970s, but demolished as part of the redevelopment with those store moving to temporary locations elsewhere in the city. The other was the Trinity Arcade; similar architecture and also built in the 1970s, but was looking very run down with low prestige shops by the time it was closed and demolished.

The new build for the shopping centre takes place on the site of the two arcades, with a bridge link to the old Leeds Shopping Plaza which has been extensively refurbished, both inside and out.

Not so much a mall

Trinity Leeds could be compared to the Eldon Square shopping centre in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, which is one of Britain’s more successful city centre shopping malls, but it will actually have more in common with the Liverpool One development. Though there will be a roof over it, and it will be on multiple floors, the centre will actually be open to the elements and will re-open streets that have been closed off for years as thoroughfares. The hope is that it will integrate as part of the city.

Shops, new and old

46 of the shops in Trinity Leeds will be new to the city. Apple will open their first store here; until now, Leeds has only been served by resellers as Apple’s recent expansion in the UK has passed it by. Several other fashion retailers will also open, since Trinity Leeds is not too far away from the Victoria Quarter where many of the more boutique fashion shops have set up around Harvey Nichols.

Marks and Spencer will expand their existing Briggate store into the centre, adding 20% to the floorspace of what is already one of their larger stores. Meanwhile the existing BHS and Boots stores in the old Leeds Shopping Plaza will remain.

Creating a vacuum

Whilst 46 of the shops in Trinity Leeds will be new, that leaves more than half that aren’t. Obviously some of those were part of the existing Leeds Shopping Plaza but others already have shops in the city and will be moving into the new centre. Christine and I were shopping in Leeds on Saturday and a number of shops already have ‘To Let’ signs up, ready for them to relocate. This was particularly noticeable on Lands Lane, which actually meets Trinity Leeds in the middle; there, Ernest Jones, River Island and La Senza all have signs up, presumably ahead of a move. Meanwhile the former Clintons Cards shop on the same street, which was closed when the chain went into administration last year, has laid empty for some months now.

Further up on The Headrow, the huge Primark store will up sticks as well, leaving a big empty shop in its place; Next is also moving out of its prominent Albion Street store. And on Greek Street, in the city’s financial district, I wouldn’t be surprised if Carluccio’s and Wagamama decide not to keep their existing restaurants as they open up new ones a couple of streets away.

Meanwhile, The Core, which is one of Leeds’ other shopping centres further up Lands Lane, is basically empty. The only shops still open there are those that open onto the street, bar one gadget shop on the top floor which was devoid of customers. The Core used to be the much busier Schofield Centre, but a drawn-out refurbishment some years ago led to footfall dropping and now the place is basically empty. One of the flagship units has been taken over by 99p Stores – hardly the high prestige shops that the owners were hoping to attract.

And on Briggate, opposite what will be the western entrance to Trinity Leeds, the Central Arcade has recently re-opened following redevelopment, but again, with almost all of its shops empty. Of the two units with a prime location on Briggate, one is empty and the other one is a branch of Gregg’s the bakers.

It’s the economy, stupid

Despite these issues, it’s good to see major investment in a city centre, especially now. We’re approaching five years since the credit crunch kick-started the global economic meltdown, and Britain is on the verge of recession for the third time since 2008. It’s really tough for the high street right now with HMV in administration along with Blockbuster and Republic, and Jessop’s has been wound up, all in the past six weeks. Any major development like this may help to restore confidence in the high street. But my worry is that the economy is so fragile that the rest of Leeds will suffer as a result, when successful shops move and take their footfall with them.

There’s quite a bit more information about Trinity Leeds in this article from My Life in Leeds which is worth reading.

HMV’s fall into administration

String Quintet

Last night, it was announced that HMV was to appoint administrators to run the business as it was no longer viable on its own, putting the jobs of over 4000 people who work there at risk. HMV is the last remaining music store in the UK, as over the years Tower Records, Track Records, MVC, Borders and, most recently, Zavvi and Woolworths (to name a few) have all met a similar fate.

Thinking back, the last time I went into HMV was over two years ago, ironically enough to buy some headphones for my iPod, so I could listen to all of the music that I’d bought online. Which is one of the major challenges that HMV faces – many people are now buying music downloads rather than physical CDs, and music downloads in the UK are dominated by Amazon and Apple’s iTunes.

Sure, HMV does sell music downloads and owns 50% of online retailer 7digital, although it’s not as popular as its rivals and tends to be more expensive. But then HMV actually does pay its fair share of taxes in the UK, unlike some other businesses, and its prices are probably higher as a result. Supermarket competition is also a big factor, as Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons and Asda all sell music and DVDs in their larger stores.

But people still buy CDs. It’s hard to give an MP3 to someone as a gift – especially at Christmas – and there will always be those who prefer to own physical objects. Downloads are great until you realise your in-car CD player doesn’t have an iPod adaptor, or your computer’s hard drive gets corrupted and you lose all of your music files.

How much of HMV will exist in future remains to be seen. It has around 35% of the UK’s CD market and quite a lot of its stores are profitable; hopefully once the failing stores are closed then the business will be able to continue trading, as happened to GAME recently. GAME is an interesting example; in Bradford, through its mergers with Gamestation and EB Games, it ended up with 3 shops within five minutes walk of each other. And this was a pattern repeated across many other towns and cities. Now it generally just has one store and seems to be doing okay. It’s sad news for the staff laid off from the stores that closed, of course, but at least it didn’t disappear forever.

But other recent high street failures haven’t had such a happy ending. Last week, camera retailer Jessops went into administration and within two days had closed all of shops for good. Unfortunately Jessops were in a hard market; few people buy compact cameras any more, as more and more people have smartphones which can take almost-as-good photos, and have the ability to share them on Facebook and Instagram straight-away, rather than waiting until you get home and empty your memory card. And independent camera shops seem to be holding up the top end of the market, especially with second-hand lenses and cameras. Jessops seems to have disappeared into the widening gap between the two.

Robert Peston, the BBC’s business editor, is quite philosophical about HMV’s collapse; in essence, it’s a sign that banks are letting almost-dead businesses fail, to free up money to lend to those that are doing well and growing. That’s not good news for the people working for these ‘zombie’ companies but a sign that, in time, things will get better.

Whilst changing shopping habits, with a move to digital downloads, are one of the reasons for HMV’s problems, another big problem for all retailers is that many people just don’t have much disposable income nowadays. We’re only just out of a double-dip recession, but last year our economy was bolstered by the Olympics and so it’s possible that Britain will be back in recession for a third time since the credit crunch later this year. Public sector pay is increasing at a measly 1% – less than the rate of inflation – and MPs voted to do the same to benefits. Unemployment isn’t as high as it could be but the fall of Jessops, and Comet just before Christmas, has resulted in thousands losing their jobs just recently. So to me, the economy is also to blame, and by extension those in charge of this country’s economic policy as well.

I’m near the end of this post, but before that I’ll come back to the topic of Bradford. In Bradford, HMV is on Broadway, a street that should, by now, lead into the new Westfield Shopping Centre, had it been built (construction will hopefully start later this year). It’s one of the few shops left there; GAME closed, as mentioned earlier, and children’s clothing retailer Adams closed down a couple of years ago. Jessops was around the corner until last weekend. What was once one of Bradford’s main shopping streets barely has anything left on it, as more and more struggling high street chain stores fall by the wayside.

I really hope that at least some of HMV’s stores stay open. It would be a shame to lose such a big name, especially as it’s the last of its kind.

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Bicester Village

Bicester Village

Today we went to Bicester Village, an outlet shopping centre in Bicester, Oxfordshire, whilst visiting relatives. It’s one of a number of outlet shopping centres, where shops sell off old, excess or seconds stock at discount prices. However, Bicester Village is somewhat posher than others.

By this, I mean it has shops from the likes of Gucci, Alexander McQueen, D&G, various Saville Row tailors, and other luxury brands that are normally the preserve of the ’1%’ who can actually afford these. If you’re happy with buying something that isn’t quite perfect, or from last season, then you can bag a significant discount.

Of course, despite these discounts, pretty much everything was still well out of our price range. Hooded jumpers for over £300 for example – and that’s a reduced price. In the end, we just bought some cheese and pasta from Carluccio’s and retreated to Starbucks for a coffee to warm up.

Visiting on a Sunday in the run up to Christmas meant it was very, very busy, although we got there before 11am so there were still a few parking spaces (top tip – use the car park next to Bicester Town railway station as it’s quieter). Sunday trading laws meant that some of the larger shops couldn’t open until 12pm, and when we went past just before then there was a queue of at least 100 people waiting to get into the Polo Ralph Lauren shop. This is despite it being one of three shops in the centre, and not the only brand to have multiple outlets – there were a couple of Calvin Klein shops as well, amongst others.

Also notable was that many of the signs were both in English and Chinese, and that UnionPay, a major card system in China akin to Visa and MasterCard, was accepted by many of the shops there. Hence there were many Chinese tourists shopping when we visited, although we heard a number of other foreign languages being spoken, and there was a wide variety of left hand drive luxury cars in the car park.

As a Northerner who doesn’t have a huge disposable income, coming to a place like this was profoundly weird, and from a social anthropology perspective it shows just how wide the gulf between the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’ is in this country. Many shops did not have anything for sale under £100 per item, and yet neither me nor most people I know would pay those sorts of prices, even though they’re already discounted. Whilst this sort of place isn’t quite for the ’1%’, it’s certainly aimed at those in the 99th percentile. I’ll stick with my Marks & Spencers clothes.