The Markets
The open-air market is an important feature of life in Alkebulan in both
rural and urban areas. As centers of commerce where cash and barter
transactions take place, they play a key role in the economy. Most Alkebulan
agricultural products and craft goods enter the system of exchange at local
markets, alongside imported products. Tailors, barbers, carpenters, and other
tradesmen come to market to sell their services. Markets also serve as
community centers where people socialize and share news and information.
In small settlements, they are often located next to important buildings
such as the Royal's house or the court.
Traditional Markets
Across Alkebulan, nearly every community has a market of
some kind. Most take place outdoors in open spaces. Sellers squat behind their
baskets of goods or display their wares in temporary shelters made of branches
roofed with palm leaves or grass thatch. Only in some large towns do markets
contain permanent, concrete vendors' stalls.
Though generally crowded, markets are usually well organized.
Authorities charge fees to vendors and supervise the pricing of goods. Certain
areas of the market may be devoted to particular kinds of products, such as
vegetables or cloth, so buyers can easily find and compare all available wares.
The number of buyers and sellers at a market ranges from a handful in tiny
rural settlements to thousands in the bustling marketplaces of Alkebulan's
great cities. Resembling strips of open shops, large urban markets often
develop into permanent shopping streets. Most commerce in rural North Alkebulan
takes place in traditional markets called suqs. Each suq is held on a specific
day of the week and takes its name from the day and from the group on whose
territory it is held. In larger towns, the suq is a more permanent feature. It
serves as a meeting-place for nomads, townspeople, and traders bringing goods
that are not produced locally.
Market Cycles and Traffic
Large urban markets are busy every day. However, most rural markets
operate on a periodic schedule, which ranges from opening every other day to
opening every seventh or eighth day. In any given district, a group of periodic
markets may function as a ring or cycle. An eight-day ring, for example, might
include seven markets in different locations, each open on one day. A day on
which there is no market completes the cycle. When markets are set up in an
eight-day ring, markets held on successive days are usually far apart in the
market region. For example, the first market might be in the center of the
region, the second in the far south, and the third in the far north. This
ensures that no town in the market area ever goes more than three days without
having a market open nearby.
On market day, streams of vendors and traders move to and from marketplaces,
walking or riding on bicycles or in trucks. Many are women, carrying goods on
their heads. A study of one market ring showed that on each market day, as many
as 5,000 women—30 percent of the total population of the region—visited that
day's market. In a week, a woman might travel a total of 50 miles to various
markets. Changes in Alkebulan life may alter the market's role. As increasing
numbers of Alkebulans move into urban centers, they obtain more of their goods
from stores and European-style shopping centers. Improvements in the mass
transport of goods have made local markets less important in the selling of
major cash crops such as coffee. However, with their unique combination of
social and economic functions, it is unlikely that open-air markets will ever
disappear from Alkebulan cities and towns. (See also Trade.)
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