The News
Thursday 28 of March 2024

In the thrall of the mall


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TNE-DF_2016-01-28_19-2

A group of friends in brilliant matching traditional outfits for an earlier wedding embody Nigeria’s new consumer phase as they browse the Delta Mall. NIGERIA SHOPS FOR SUPPLIES AS IT GROWS TO BE THE WORLD’S THIRD MOST POPULOUS COUNTRY BY 2050

BY NORIMITSU ONISHI
The New York Times

Groups of children wandered inside, wide-eyed at the plenty. Teenagers and adults took selfies and group photos, raving about the convenience, the security, the leisure and, not least, the air conditioning, so silent, omnipresent and soothing.

Some had stepped inside places like this during trips to the United States, Europe or even Nigeria’s biggest city, Lagos, which got its first one just a couple of years ago.

Others were “Johnny-Just-Come” first-time visitors, standing confused before sensor-activated doors. They drew smiles from veterans who had already been once or twice to the newest and biggest attraction in this Nigerian city in recent memory: a gleaming shopping mall.

“I’m very, very, very excited,” said John Monday, who had traveled nearly 322 kilometers to visit the mall here on a recent Saturday afternoon, as a friend took a photo of him posing in front of a supermarket. “A middle-class person can come into this mall and feel a sense of belonging.”

Delta Mall opened here last spring, bringing to about a dozen the number of Western-style shopping malls catering to 180 million people in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation. Many enclosed malls, anchored by supermarkets and big box stores, with other tenants lining long hallways, may be struggling in the United States. But in Nigeria, which has Africa’s biggest economy and is projected to overtake the United lous nation by 2050, malls are just taking off .

The emergence of malls — and mall culture — in Nigeria reflects broad trends on the continent, including a growing middle class with spending power and the rapid expansion of cities like Warri that are little known outside the region.

As in the United States, malls in Nigeria have quickly become hangouts for the young and destinations for families. Their rarity also imbue a sense of exclusivity.

Pushing a shopping cart full of food and the latest Chinese smartphone, Wealth Mark, 22, strolled through Delta Mall with his younger sister, Confidence, and her friend, Franca, all with wide smiles. Mark stopped to take photos of the two young women with the smartphone, then a selfie of all three.

“When I am meeting my friends here or in Lagos, we always go to the mall,” said Mark, who does marketing for a bar-code company owned by an older sister. “We can just spend a few hours at the mall and relax.”

Even older Nigerians who were skeptical about paying premium prices over traditional markets saw the mall’s value as a family outing.

“My kids enjoyed it,” said Victor Omunu, 53, adding that he would never shop for himself at the mall. “I bought them ice cream. It’s not bad at all, the mall. I was happy because I was with my family. I even met some old friends.”

One of the main cities in Nigeria’s oil-producing region, Warri has grown rapidly in recent years, like many other medium-size cities in the country. New housing developments are clustered on the outskirts.

Nigeria’s population, which is growing and urbanizing at one of the fastest rates in the world, is expected to increase to 400 million from 180 million by 2050, according to projections by the United Nations. That would place Nigeria behind only India and China.

The size of Nigeria’s middle class, as well as Africa’s, varies according to the definitions used. But many experts agree that Nigeria’s size and population growth will drive the expansion of Africa’s middle class.

Standard Bank, a South African bank with branches across the continent, estimated that Nigeria’s middle class grew by 600 percent from 2000 to 2014. While 4.1 million Nigerian households are now considered middle class, or 11 percent of the total population, an additional 7.6 million households would make it into that category by 2030, according to the bank’s projections.

Resilient Africa, a South African joint venture that includes Shoprite, the continent’s biggest food retailer, built the mall here. It is working on five other malls in other cities and looking to secure four more sites, said Eddie McDonald, who heads Resilient’s Nigerian operations.

“The retail trade in Nigeria is still in its infancy stage, but growing,” he said.

Informal shops, individually run, are still thriving. Street hawkers sell food, clothes and home appliances on sidewalks, or wherever they can find a captive audience, like Nigeria’s epic traffic jams, known as go-slows. The hawkers often compete directly with the malls, selling their wares to people driving into parking lots next to retailers like Game, a discount superstore owned by Wal-Mart.

“The informal Nigerian economic sector is very strong,” said Chimaraoke Izugbara, a Nigerian researcher at the African Population and Health Research Center in Nairobi, Kenya. “Even with these big shopping malls and the complicated Wal-Mart economy that has come to Nigeria, you see that some upper-class people still go to the market and buy their fish from the old woman on the road.”

Here in Warri, people have traditionally bought clothes at the hundreds of tiny shops in Igbo Market, named after the ethnic group that dominates the business. Once a year, shop owners travel to southern China, where, with the help of locally based Nigerian middlemen, they buy goods and ship them here.

Ebere Chukwu, 38, a shop owner since 1999, said he had been to Delta Mall with his family, but only “to feed my eyes.”

“That place looked like abroad, it looked like America,” he said.

But Chukwu was confident that longtime customers would not desert Igbo Market for the mall. The market’s prices are cheaper.

Esther Ogbolu, who was shopping for shoes at Igbo Market, said she had found the mall unaffordable, though she spoke approvingly of its air-conditioning, smiling at the memory.

But to other businessmen, like Matthew Asegiemhe, the future lies in the mall. Since opening a clothing store, Button Up, in the city five years ago, he has seen sales rise 15 percent to 20 percent each year, and decided to open a branch in the mall.

“Middle-class customers are increasing — that’s why,” Asegiemhe said.