A man pedals past a Wal-Mart store in Shanghai,
China. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Turns out Wal-Mart's plan to expand heavily
into China isn't going as easily as it would like.
Bloomberg reports that the U.S. retailer is
"restructuring" part of its business in China by changing management
style and closing nearly 20 stores within the next year. However, Wal-Mart is
retooling and will open other stores in areas they think they'll succeed in.
Wal-Mart stores on the mainland resemble those
in North America - with aisles and aisles of toiletries, toys, gifts and stacks
of fresh local produce. However, the store has several rivals including China
Resources Enterprise Ltd.
In a conference call on Oct. 15, Bloomberg
reports Scott Price, Wal-Mart's Asia chief said the 20 stores to close
represents 2.5 percent of its total sales volume in the People's
Republic.
The Chinese economy is not growing as quickly
as it did in previous years but in the third quarter, the economy grew
7.8 per cent thanks to greater foreign and domestic demand for factory made goods,
according to The
Guardian.
"I see a lot of angst, for whatever the
reason, around China's reduction in its GDP forecast. I think most economies in
the world would kill for China's reduced number. Let alone its absolute growth.
We see China as a very important market and we're very optimistic about
it," Price told the Economic Times of India.
Wal-Mart is not the only western firm trying
to break into the lucrative Chinese market. Sweden's Ikea has successfully expanded into major
Chinese cities and the company should have 40 stores in China by 2020
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