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Holiday shopping season in the U.S.
Mario Ritter

 

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I'm Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Economics Report.

Almost one-fourth of all personal spending in the United States takes place during the holiday season. There are gifts to give this month for Christmas, Hanukkah and the African American celebration of Kwanzaa. The traditional shopping season began last Friday, after Thanksgiving Day. Personal spending represents two-thirds of the economy, so holiday sales are especially important.

Reports on November results have just come out. Major sellers, especially lower-priced ones, had mostly moderate gains at stores open at least a year. Wal-Mart was up just seven-tenths of one percent. Wal-Mart is the biggest seller in the world. The company had expected growth of two to four percent in November, fueled by sales on "Black Friday."

The day after Thanksgiving is called that. Storekeepers used to record profits in black ink and losses in red ink. A day in the black means a return to profit.

But for this Black Friday, Wal-Mart decided not to cut prices as aggressively on some goods as other stores did. Wal-Mart says it has learned from this and will listen more to its customers this holiday season.

Businesses also listen to the Consumer Confidence Index to get an idea of how Americans feel about the economy. Many economists expected an increase in consumer confidence in November. But the Conference Board, a private group, says the index fell again for a fourth month.

The National Retail Federation estimated in September that holiday sales would increase four and one-half percent this year. Holiday sales increased five percent last year, after poor sales the year before.

The business group estimated that Americans will spend 220,000 million dollars this season. It says they spent just over 10 percent of that last weekend.

Also, it says more Americans for the first time this season plan to use a debit card than a credit card for purchases. A debit card, also called a check card, is linked to the money that a person has in a bank. In other words, users must have the money before they can spend it.

About 35 percent of shoppers said they would mainly use debit cards, compared to 30 percent for credit cards. Financial experts say this change might mean that more people want to keep to a budget this holiday season.

This VOA Special English Economics Report was written by Mario Ritter. This is Gwen Outen.

Vocabulary:

Hanukkah: an eight-day festival beginning on the 25th day of Kislev, commemorating the victory in 165 b.c. of the Maccabees over Antiochus Epiphanes (c. 215-164 b.c.) and the rededication of the Temple at Jerusalem.(猶太教的獻(xiàn)殿節(jié),光明節(jié),一種從猶太歷3月的第25天開(kāi)始并持續(xù)8天的節(jié)日,以紀(jì)念公元前165年馬卡比一家戰(zhàn)勝安提俄克斯·埃皮費(fèi)尼。)

Kwanzaa: 寬札文化節(jié)是非洲裔美國(guó)人的節(jié)日,1966年由黑人學(xué)者M(jìn)aulana Karenga創(chuàng)立,目的是創(chuàng)建一種完全建立在非裔美國(guó)人自己文化遺產(chǎn)上的傳統(tǒng)。寬扎節(jié)歷時(shí)七天(從12月26日到1月1日),與宗教慶祝儀式無(wú)關(guān)!皩捲痹谒估镂魍哒Z(yǔ)中意思是“慶祝水果大豐收”。

 

 
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