The Heated Sunday Shopping Debate

By Karen Fawcett

When I first moved to Paris, I was amazed stores weren’t open on Sundays.  If you wanted to do any real shopping, you were out of luck.

A law in 1906 forbade shopping on Sunday. A few businesses, like bakeries, butcher shops and other small stores were allowed to be open in the morning so Maman could buy the ingredients for the day’s lunch. Sunday lunches were sacred and the time when the family would gather.  Besides, this has been useful for fiction writers who wanted to work out their familial demons

But it’s a new world and President Nicolas Sarkozy is taking on the “Sunday cause” with renewed passion. He has proposed a bill that is being debated in the legislature. If passed, stores could open.

Sarko’s blood pressure rose this past June adding new ammunition to his case.  He had to call the children’s store Bonpoint on the Left Bank and ask for it to be opened for Mrs. Obama and Malia and Sasha. “Is it normal, when Madame Obama and her daughters want to go shopping on a Sunday, that I have to make phone calls and ask a store to open?” the French President asked. “How are we supposed to explain to them that we are the only country where shops are closed on Sunday?” he said last week as MPs geared up for the latest legislative fight.

 

This isn’t a new concept. But it’s been shot down for the past 20 years and opposed by the church, unions, conservatives in Sarkozy’s center-right party and the Left.

This latest proposal would allow shops in designated tourist areas and special commercial zones to open on Sundays and specifies that employees can work on that day on a voluntary basis in order to placate the unions.

But it’s a Catch-22.  Paris’s Mayor Bertrand Delanoë, a leading member of the Socialist Party, is opposed to classifying Paris as a tourist zone. “Sunday is a day of rest respected by most citizens. It must not be sacrificed to this vision of a deregulated economy that doesn’t take into account the family and personal lives of workers.”

“The world is changing and we need to stop burying our heads in the sand,” states Richard Mallie, a deputy from Sarkozy's UMP party and one of the authors of the bill.

Dismissing French opposition to Sunday shopping as irrational,” Mallie defended the bill as a necessary answer to the huge rise in on-line shopping and demands placed on modern working couples.

Sarkozy’s 2007 presidential campaign promised to allow more shops to open on Sundays. His government argues the measure would help cushion the blow that the recession has dealt to the job market, estimating that 15,000 jobs could be saved.

For example, Paris’s Galeries Lafayette has said it would create between 300 and 400 jobs and boost sales by 10 percent if the store were allowed to open on Sundays.

As an American, I think stores being open on Sundays would facilitate life for many families where both the husband and wife work. Most people are betting the bill will pass.  But some feel that allowing stores to open on Sundays will diminish the quality of life in France. Clearly some people do maintain the family lunch tradition. But does it need to be every Sunday? What do you think?

©  Paris New Media, LLC

Karen@BonjourParis.com

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COMMENTS

  • Oleg T

    Parisian Lover 2 Comments
    Sunday shopping That's really awful when you are very busy all the week and can't buy something at Sunday, when you are free and want to do something home. I visited a lot of countries and saw many 24/7 shops, many shops working on Sunday for 2-4 hours smaller, but not so much shops not working at Sunday. What they are want to achieve with Sunday-closed shops? They only losing money and making life worse.
  • Jacquelyn Goudeau

    Parisian Lover 3 Comments
    Viva la TIME -OUT There is a lot ot be learned from our own SPIRIT and CREATIVITY when we take time out at least ONE Day a week. Catching up to ourselves helps keep the world spinning in a more healthy way...even without the Department Stores being open on Sundays.
    I found it necessary at several points in my life to work those Sunday shifts...
    Is it necessary to a healthy life? "Leche la vitrines"...seems to keep things in better perspective...
    Just another perspective from over here in California, where everything is open and hardly anyone gets much R&R !
    Viva lat time-out!
  • Frances Dennis

    Parisian Lover 1 Comments
    Sunday Shopping Karen, love reading your articles. Just retired from a 60 - 70 hour a week white collar job and my women friends and I plan a 3 week trip to France in late September. Your articles help with our planning.

    Regarding the Sunday store openings, I vote "stay closed". It was great at first in the USA but later became like any other day of the week. Folks need to know that there is one day out of the week that is sacred and off limits to company work. Knowing what we do now, my friends agree that there is no escape from the corporate world. Yes, your article noted it would be "volunteer" but that would soon go by the wayside. I remember what it was like when I was a child and Sunday was our family day. So glad we had it together. My spouse was union so my children grew up with Sunday's being special. Today's world is insane enough. Good luck with your country's decision.

    Frances Dennis
  • Elizabeth BURKE

    Parisian Lover 1 Comments
    SUNDAY SHOPPING
    Small business or what is left of it are struggling with taxes, regulations, paper work and very few customers duiring regular business hours. Notice how liimited choice has become in all stores since this economic crisis began.

    Obama prefers to have a dinner with his wife in Paris rather than meet with Putin in this dangerous time of the history of the world , Michele Obama is out with a $4000 purse and her two mall rat .daughters shopping in Paris and Rome , all paid by the American tax payer
    France is not the only country to close stores on Sunday.
    We know the secret wish of Sarkosy was to be born American. It's too bad is former wife is living his dream and not him.
    I say Sunday lunch is good for the family every week, and the stores are to remain closed.
    If you want to shop, why would you do it in France? The euro's value can only be found in the USA.
  • Cher Lewis

    Parisian Lover 4 Comments
    Sunday shopping Keep the shops closed; workers will be forced to give up their family time. Who needs to buy shoes and dresses on Sunday? And tourist? Let them eat brioche!

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