This paper examines the international expansion of Atacadão, a Brazilian cash-and-carry warehouse store chain founded in 1962 in Maringá, Paraná, and acquired by the Carrefour Group in 2007 for R2. 2 billion. Historically, retail innovation has flowed from economically advanced nations to emerging markets. Atacadão represents a compelling counter-narrative: a retail format forged under the economic pressures of the Brazilian market that has since been transplanted to Europe, specifically to France in June 2024. Drawing on the theoretical lens of reverse innovation (Govindarajan & Ramamurti, 2011), this paper analyzes how Atacadão’s core value proposition—high-volume, low-price, warehouse-style retailing with degressive pricing—emerged from Brazil’s socioeconomic conditions, matured into the country’s dominant retail format, and now competes in one of the world’s most sophisticated retail landscapes. Using the pilot store in Aulnay-sous-Bois (Seine-Saint-Denis) as a primary case, the study interrogates the operational, social, and competitive challenges of this international transfer. Implications for retail internationalization theory, emerging-market multinationals (EMNEs), and the future of discount retail in Europe are discussed.
Zen Revista (Sun,) studied this question.