Tags for Forum Posts: shopping, wood green
Yup,
A guide to modern shopping:
1. Find a product on the high street.
2. Find and buy it cheaper on-line.
3. Wonder where all the neighbourhood shops have gone.
Sad but true I'm afraid...
But it's not quite that simple, is it?
The changing pattern - local stores contracting while malls and megastores expand - long predates internet shopping. And both huge retailers and small specialist stores are happy to develop their own complementary online businesses. For the latter, thriving online sales may be the only way to stay in business in the medium and longer term.
Well, what a surprise!
It's next door to a bookies (Jennings)
Regrettably, these kind of operations are legal. It makes no financial sense to borrow from them. All they can do is make a bad situation worse.
If the head of Barclaycard said he would discourage his daughters from obtaining credit on that card (circa 18%?), what sense is it to pay APR in the 2,000% to 3,000% range?
There is another aspect to this: demand. If borrowers understood what utter folly it was to contract to pay interest at the rate these companies charge, legally, they might never go to them.
Whether these shops should be allowed to exist (i.e. the supply side) is an open question. But the fact there is demand there for them, that is proof of a severe want of consumer education.
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