My favorite is Hongqiao Market near the Temple of Heaven, and when I go, I always take my two best Chinese friends with me. They do the bargaining because I'm terrible at it. Maybe it's a cultural thing.
If you've ever been to Bali in Indonesia, you know it's quite a holiday spot. They're friendly, almost everyone speaks English (because it's where Australians like to holiday, I guess) but if you make a bad deal with a vendor, you have only yourself to blame.
When you walk into the store, they smile and ask what country you're from. Somehow the answer "America" produces a bigger smile and even a little drool.
In fact, the Bali vendors' bag color-coding system is an open secret; they indicate to one another how good a bargainer you are by the color of bag in which they put your purchase. A white bag meant you were a pushover, black meant you were a tough bargainer, and they even had striped bags to indicate something in between. My first bag was striped because I knew I had to haggle; I just wasn't good enough at it.
And that's why I hate doing it, but that's life as a foreigner shopping at Hongqiao bargain or die (financially). So, that's why Eric and Cathy (their English names) go along.
Stop No 1 was my favorite jewelry stall on the third floor. Bonnie is a delightful woman from Guangdong who speaks enough English to answer my questions and understand what I want. I bought pearls for my best friend and a cousin from her, so when the best friend asked me to bring jade beads for her jewelry-making hobby, I knew exactly where I wanted to start my search.
Bonnie remembered me. Out came the water bottles for her "preferred" customers, and the mating dance began. Eric explained what I wanted, and it was really no problem. Bonnie doesn't deal in loose jade, but in the great Chinese tradition of guanxi (connections) where everyone knows someone, she found some, and I bought nine strands for 600 yuan ($75) in maybe 30 minutes.
Next was a jade carving for another good friend. We wandered around, and I discovered there actually is a thing as a bad day for the vendors at Hongqiao. But I was surprised by the woman's pre-emptory strike.
"How much?" I asked in Chinese for a jade dragon. She said 150 yuan ($18), but after one exchange with Eric, the price was 60 yuan ($7.5). Why? She told Eric she hadn't sold anything all day and was desperate.
It actually happens yahoo!
It happened again on the second floor, where I looked for a silk robe for a friend in New Mexico. Suddenly, a 220 yuan ($27) offer for a reversible black-blue number was 100 yuan ($12.5). I couldn't say "sold!" fast enough.
I couldn't find the right silk tie for another cousin until I was near the exit door a black one with a golden dragon pattern. You can tell I like dragons, right?
Anyway, 100 kuai became 40 kuai ($5), and I was done shopping in two hours.
In Bali, I'd have had all black bags.
(China Daily 02/02/2007 page20)
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