skip to main content

You Are Here: Home / Learning / Money and Management / Management & Organisations / Evan On... The WalMart effect
 
Management & organisations
 

Evan On... The WalMart effect

 
Asda WalMart in Milton Keynes
Asda WalMart in Milton Keynes

Filling your trolley

Watch as Greg Wallace investigates cheap supermarkets - do they cut prices and cut corners?

After The Bottom Line looked at WalMart, Evan Davis was keen to find out what a declining economy has done to the WalMart effect

Watch

You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to view this clip - download Flash.

Listen

Save this mp3 file to your computer

Save this mp3 file to your computer

You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to use our mp3 player - download Flash.

Save this mp3 file to your computer

Read

Nice to have someone from Walmart - “the global Walmart empire” - in the studio with us today, because Walmart has been cited as having a large effect on the global economy in the last few years.

The Walmart effect was the ability to source and to take products, particularly from China, made in China - low cost products - and to deliver them to western consumers. Logistically it was an important task; sourcing is a particular skill and Walmart did it extremely well, and it drove down prices, it gave us disinflation in the western world as those goods came to the west and competed away high cost items that originally had been made here.

It was a driving force to the global economy. And I was quite interested to discover whether that Walmart effect that’s been written about in economic treaties around the planet for the last few years, whether that effect is still alive and well or whether the changing exchange rates that we’ve seen in the global economy, the decline in the dollar relative to the Chinese currency, the very much more rapid decline in the pound as well against the dollar… whether that meant that the Walmart effect still worked.

Would the price of those goods coming from China still be low enough to comprise a Walmart effect? And in addition, would the requirement for consumers, in the west, in the States and in the UK to start saving, would that mean the Walmart effect no longer was very important because we wouldn’t be able to afford to buy the things that China was supplying?

As you might expect, Andy Bond of Asda didn’t think it was all over because, of course, the global recession means that the Chinese want the work, they want to do the exports so the prices aren’t going up, the prices are still, if you like, are still out there, the deals are still out there to be made.

But the Walmart effect probably won’t be talked about as much now we’re in a global recession, now we’re in a period of saving in the western world rather than spending, but it’s been a very important thing in the global economy for the last decade.

Also this week

Content last updated: 21/02/2009

 

Bookmark with:

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Newsvine
  • NowPublic
  • Reddit
  • Stumbleupon
Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view star ratings.
 

People who liked this page also liked:

Comments

Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view comments.
 
 

Explore Open2

Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Would you say you're a Christian? Share your views, and learn about the views of others, in our new Christianity survey.

Representatives to the Conference on Unemployment The meeting was called by U.S. President Warren G. Harding in response to the 1921 recession

Can we ease the pain of the downturn by using lessons from the past? Malcolm Prowle guides us through the recession.

Breaking news, 1940s style

Keep up to date with our Twitterfeeds of latest news from Open2 and alerts of OU programmes on the BBC.

 
 

Site info and help