Black Friday spending may be 鈥渃ounterintuitive鈥 this year as an economic recession looms, according to some experts.
This year鈥檚 Black Friday sales are expected to create more buzz for shoppers than in previous years, despite yesterday鈥檚 announcement of a 75-point hike in the official cash rate and a recession predicted to strike mid-2023.
Retail First Managing Director Chris Wilkinson said people are still 鈥渓ooking for savings wherever they can get them鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 almost counterintuitive because we鈥檙e facing a very challenging time for people economically but there鈥檚 more hype and marketing now than ever before around Black Friday.鈥
He said purchases are more likely to be emotionally driven after a difficult 2022.
鈥淧eople are still facing the situation of wanting to feel good. It has not been a good year for the consumer, so people are looking for feel-good purchases.鈥
Traditionally observed in the US on the Friday following Thanksgiving Day (the third Thursday of November), Black Friday has quickly become 鈥淏lack Friday Week鈥 for some retailers in Aotearoa.
Wilkinson said the sale hasn鈥檛 had the same impact here in the last few years because businesses didn鈥檛 have the same product supply, and retailers performed well in online sales so they didn鈥檛 have the incentive to discount their prices.
First Retail managing director Chris Wilkinson. Photo / Mark Mitchell
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Auckland Central Budgeting Consultants general manager Tim Maurice advises consumers to 鈥渟tart planning now and spending less鈥.
鈥淭he OCR and interest rates are up so people need to do stress-testing now. Plan to see how your spending will impact in March next year.
Maurice said the budgeting service had noted the rise of second-tier lenders and Buy-Now-Pay-Later schemes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not worth being in debt for the next 12 months or three years for something you don鈥檛 need,鈥 he said.
Helping people 鈥漦now the difference between needs and wants-spending鈥 is the key to managing budgets this season, Maurice said.
聽about Black Friday spending, giving warnings about discount prices (), buy-now-pay-later schemes, and pressure tactics from retailers.
聽has shown Kiwis plan to spend over $700 on average this Black Friday, up from $464.50 in planned spending in 2020.
However, 95 per cent of survey participants said they have noticed significant price increases across consumer goods, fuel and grocery items, with 93 per cent of respondents saying they are worried about the cost of living crisis.
Wilkinson said retailers are more likely to give bigger discounts this Black Friday to make up for the 鈥渃hallenging year鈥.
鈥淥ver the past couple of years, Black Friday hasn鈥檛 had the same kind of impact because businesses didn鈥檛 have the same product supply. It was a strong economy so there was less need to discount prices.鈥
He added that suppliers are now able to sell directly to consumers, seen in marketing from brands such as Dyson.
鈥淭hree years ago, Dyson was one of those brands that were highly priced and not discounted. Over recent years, they have marketed straight to consumers.鈥
Wilkinson said Black Friday 鈥渃atalyses鈥 the Christmas spending season and will show how strong spending will turn out over the next month.
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