Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worldbiz/archives/2005/12/27/2003286270

World Business Quick Take


AGENCIES
Tuesday, Dec 27, 2005, Page 12

¡½ Entertainment
HK Disney has a good day
Hong Kong's new US$3.5 billion Disneyland theme park was full to overflowing on Christmas Day for only the second time since its opening, a news report said yesterday. All tickets for the park were sold for only the second time since it opened in September, the South China Morning Post reported, and guests without pre-bought tickets were turned away. The theme park would not say how many people entered the park on Dec. 25 but its capacity is 30,000 a day. The park is expected to attract more than 5 million visitors in its first year. The park only sold out its daily quota of tickets for the first time on Dec. 13, the day the WTO ministerial meeting began in Hong Kong.

¡½ Retail
Retailers expecting big week
With a ho-hum pre-Christmas season behind them, the nation's retailers were set to usher in the post-Christmas period yesterday with expanded shopping hours, a blitz of deep discounts and fresh new merchandise. Michael Niemira, chief economist at the International Council of Shopping Centers, expects the week after Christmas will be "big." But he still believes that merchants will wind up with a modest 3 percent to 3.5 percent sales increase for the November-December period. Niemira expects that 20 percent of gift card holders will redeem their cards this week. According to ShopperTrak RCT Corp, the week after Christmas accounted for 10 percent of holiday sales last year, but analysts expect that period could account for as much as 14 percent, given the soaring popularity of gift cards.

¡½ Piracy
Pirates hit Mexican artisans
Commercial "piracy" from China, Malaysia and India threatens the livelihoods of some 8 million Mexican artisans, the National Peasants Confederation said on Sunday. "The piracy invasion, mainly from China, affects more than 8 million Mexican artisans and up to 100 percent of their workshops whom, due to the government's lack of interest, could disappear in the coming years," the confederation said in a statement. The confederation, Mexico's leading peasant organization, said that Asian manufacturers "copy in detail all types of works created in rural Mexico, in order to mass produce them for sale into international markets at prices far below their real value." The result is that Asian producers are selling copies of Mexican crafts of "terrible quality" but 50 percent cheaper. Even worse, the organization said, the Asian copies are being sold into Mexico.

¡½ Economics
NY strike eats up revenue
Businesses lost US$1 billion in revenue during the three-day transit strike, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a Sunday radio address. Comptroller William Thompson and other officials had estimated the city economy would lose US$400 million a day during a transit strike. Transit workers walked off the job on Tuesday, shutting down buses and subways for millions of riders for three days. Several economists said the city's cost estimate of US$400 million a day was too high. Goldman Sachs economists said it failed to account for offsets: Some workers unable to get to work worked from home via computer; many people who would have shopped in the city may have turned to suburban locations; and the strike generated new kinds of economic activity, as employers rented shuttle buses and hotel rooms for workers.