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I dont think this is true. In Germany there never has been a 'bagger-culture' :)


They are so small, so that you just pass through the items into your shopping cart. Basically you don't have much of an option. If you shop without a shopping cart (like me buying just a few things that fit into my bagpack) the cassier might suggest that I take a cart next time.

Then there is this side-board across the checkout that you can use to bag your purchase.

What you also see a lot in Germany is people taking empty cardboard boxes from the shelves and use them instead of bags at the checkout. It is quick and convenient.


Then my marketing book lied to me.


When was Germany supposed to have had baggers according to the book?


When Aldi came to Denmark and didn't redesign the checkout for not having baggers.


Germany never had baggers. In fact, to me as a German, the job of a bagger appears about as nonsensical as that of a telephone sanitizer.


Walmart had baggers for the short time they were operating here.


Did they? I remember shopping at Walmart around 2000, but I don't recall seeing baggers there.


What are baggers? People standing after the checkout that put stuff into bags for you? If so, that sounds quite unusual, unnecessary, and even annoying to me.


Yes. Here in Australia the cashiers usually do it for you, into rather flimsy single-use plastic bags.

Seems a bit foreign to my German soul, too.


Annoying?




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