Relax – glum shop assistants don’t necessarily mean the Hong Kong economy is weak
Paul Stapleton says there’s really no need to fret over the many surveys that purport to tell us something true about people’s behaviour or our society – because they don’t
Money – that’s what Hong Kong women want, survey finds
In the next few weeks, undoubtedly, another survey will arrive and make headlines for a day or two. In the meantime, the same tired reasoning about Hong Kong’s stressful way of life or weak economy will be hauled out to explain the result.
The problem with these surveys is not necessarily their reliability. Whether the results are valid is another question. In other words, drawing deeper meaning – such as smiles being reflective of the state of the economy, as suggested by some – is a different matter.
Hong Kong takes 28th in survey of most liveable locations for Asian expatriates
Let’s consider the possible validity of the survey that measured the smiles of shop assistants. For the moment, let’s ignore how the “trained mystery shoppers” were able to accurately determine the degree to which the lips must curl upwards to qualify as a smile. And let us also assume that in all 37 regions, the shoppers entered similar types of retail businesses. Yes, big assumptions.