Another Christmas, and another year gone. The trees are coming down, the lights are packed away, and the copious leftovers have either been eaten, chucked out, or thrown in the green waste bin.
Christmas and New Year’s are a huge time of year, with many people stressing about the perfect gift, and getting around to see the family. And although Christmas and New Year can be a time of joy, there’s no doubting that there is also significant stress to be had in the season. Running around crowded shopping centres in
the Australian heat, searching for the present you spent hours browsing online or in catalogues for, only to get to the store and find that the shop is all out of stock. They won’t be getting any more until after Christmas.
Even small businesses may struggle to source good quality wholesale giftware during the festive and end-of-year season, and with current economic burdens and Australia’s seasonality, Christmas in 2026 is calling businesses big and small to conduct themselves in new ways. Christmas in…January?
It’s no secret that things have been a little hard economically. The cost-of-living crisis has been active for an extended period of time, and more families than ever (particularly low-income families ) are struggling to make ends meet.
Groceries are more expensive, wages are stagnating, and then suddenly, the end of the year comes around, and the most fiscally exhaustive time of year begins. People have responded accordingly…