Japanese luxury stores, crowded with Chinese!
Visitor 1:
You can't do that, why do you want to cut in line?
Visitor 2:
Who's cutting in line? We're here at four o'clock!
Netizens who pay attention to luxury goods must have noticed this matter recently.
Because the exchange rate of the yen against the US dollar has refreshed the lowest in the past 34 years, falling below 158 yuan to 1 yuan, taking a 20,000 bag as an example, it can be cheaper by three or four thousand yuan.
For consumers, it is real money, so the Japanese LV store is crowded with Chinese, and there is the opening scene, and the scene was very chaotic for a while.
For this kind of "taking advantage" in Japan, netizens are talking a lot, let's see what everyone says:
Who's queuing? Are there really so many people in need of luxury bags?
This matter is still quiet, don't let them know, haha!
Isn't that just giving money to people?
Can't you tell the situation?
Vanity is really unacceptable!
Just a bag, why bother?
It is difficult for people to understand the consumption concept of these people.
For this country, it is always back and forth.
These people are so pitiful, propping up the façade with 1 bag.
If there is really money, who should suffer this sin?
I wonder what aunts will do when they see this?
After reading the sharing of netizens, everyone is still relatively reasonable, at least these people will not go to Japan to line up, because life is still affordable, and tens of thousands of bags still have to be loaded with things?
And if you can really afford it, he won't go to the queue before dawn, whether it's really buying it yourself, or as netizens said, he simply wants to "make a difference", and the final result is that these people are not going to "send money" to others?
However, some netizens feel that this situation is not difficult to understand, because the cheap ones are their own money, saving money for themselves, is there anything wrong with this?
It's normal, how affordable this is, and it's all your own money saved.
Why do some people think that a bag can represent a person's worth? In fact, as long as it is a consumption proportional to one's own income, it is generally understandable.
But does this kind of queuing up to buy luxury goods in Japan need to rise to a higher level, or is it just a simple consumption behavior?
What do you think about this?