You are still failing to grasp the law in Finland which states that you get 200% salary on sundays.sinikala wrote: Needing to employ people at a higher (overtime) rate on a Sunday will be balanced either (a) by increased revenue from increased sales or (b) if sales are flat and you only get people switching their shopping days it means staffing requirements for other days will go down.
My guess is that in the big chains it will be a re-distribution of the usual Friday evening and Saturday lunchtime rush that we currently see. And the worry about small shops... what small shops?!
Finland lost it's highstreet traders long ago... the butchers, fishmongers, greengrocers, delis... outside of the Kaupahalli where are they? They seem to do a decent trade as market stalls. Bakers seem to have survived as they are often combined with a cafe... but I heard that the rest had disappeared in the 80's and '90s. The hypermarkets tend not to compete with those who remain.
And incase anyone wants to point out the obvious that I didn't mention, It's hard to believe increased opening hours would cause an overall drop in sales.
Every workhour on sunday equals two on any other day. Expenses grow.
How are you going to sort that out? It's not like they have huge excess workforce left with all the YT.
Well, bluestupid, you clearly have not managed to notice that tar here thinks market forces should be permitted to make the decisions. I gave two prime examples on how marketforces fail to make right decisions.To find a relationship between the sub-prime collapse and sunday trading is rather quite impressive. Can somebody pass Dishwash his dunce's cap?Tiwaz wrote:You see, we can look at USA and Iceland how things turn out when you let people run business like they want. They end up going bust and hurting the society as whole.
Also, you again in your incredible inability to grasp things failed to realize that spending in Finland is far less than in USA, where you take debt to buy more junk. There, it is almost rule. Here, it is hobby of few idiots who are pitied by their surroundings.
Stores cannot make profit unless they increase sales, and sales just do not increase much since people do not overspend.
That is also explanation for tar about logic. And tar, you might want to figure out WHY no large store is not open less hours than their competitors. It might require some thinking from you, but it might do good to think reason-consequence relations instead of assuming stuff like bluearse here, and you tar.
So, arse and tar. Tell me, why every large store is open basically maximum amount of hours they can? They could be open less... But they do not.
So where is this "they can choose not to"-option if they cannot use it?