Categories · Business (Tobacco)
· Teen Smoking/Youth
· Business (General)
non-USA, by Country · Japan
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Jump to full article: Bloomberg News, 2009-07-21 Author: Go Onomitsu and Naoko Fujimura
Intro: Japan’s convenience-store sales in June fell for the first time in 14 months, as customers spent less on cigarettes and lunchbox meals.
Sales at stores open more than a year dropped 2.3 percent to 605.9 billion yen ($6.44 billion), the Japan Franchise Association said in a statement today. Department store sales fell 8.8 percent in June, capping the worst half-year performance, the Japan Department Stores Association said in a separate release today.
Consumers in Japan, the world’s second-largest economy, have cut back on spending as unemployment rose to a five-year high and wages fell for the 12th straight month in May. Sales at convenience stores last year were also boosted with the introduction of an age verification card for vending-machine purchases of cigarettes, which increased customer traffic at chains including Seven & I Holdings Co.’s 7-Eleven and Lawson Inc.’s outlets.
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