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Employees work along a production line of a textile factory in Suzhou, Jiangsu province. Domestic
consumption in China contributed 60% to gross domestic product growth in the first half even as the country grew at its slowest pace in 25 years.
Bloomberg
Beijing
You’ve heard of Made in China. Get ready for Sold in China.
For decades, China has exported cheap goods to the rest of the world even while domestic consumption waned. Now, the country’s shoppers could be set for a reboot.
If the government delivers on its promise to transform the economy by encouraging spending on the high street, China’s consumer base has the potential to hit $67tn over the next decade, according to The Demand Institute, a think tank jointly run by The Conference Board and Nielsen.
Global interest in Chinese shoppers is already high. Music doyenne Taylor Swift has teamed up with JD.com Inc, the second-largest e-commerce company in China, to sell a new fashion line designed specifically for Chinese shoppers. At the movies, ticket sales are surging, with first-half box office revenue this year rising to 20bn yuan ($3.2bn), compared with just 4bn yuan in all of 2008.
The hard economic data are also showing a shift, albeit slowly. Consumption in China contributed 60% to gross domestic product growth in the first half, even as the country grew at its slowest in 25 years.
Part of the spending increase is down to a government led push to shift the economy away from debt fueled investment and more toward consumption. But that won’t happen overnight: Consumption’s share of the economy eased to 28% in 2011 from 76% in 1952, according to the Demand Institute.
“There are signs that the decline in consumption’s share of GDP may have abated, but it has certainly not yet been reversed,” the report’s lead authors Louise Keely and Brian Anderson said. In its analysis, the Demand Institute modelled two scenarios, both based on GDP growth slowing from around 7% to 4% by 2019 where it would stay until 2025.
Under the first scenario – which they figure is the most likely – the consumption share of GDP would remain constant at about 28% between 2015 and 2025, with total spending reaching 330tn yuan or $53tn.
In the second case, where consumption reaches 46% of output by 2025, or annual spending rises 126%, consumption would balloon to 420tn yuan, or $67tn.
The analysis is based on the development of 167 countries between 1950 and 2011. Countries with similar underlying fundamentals to China saw consumption remain flat relative to GDP for some time after it stopped falling.
If China’s shoppers do take off, it will be from a relatively low base. Using the latest available comparative data from 2011, consumption in China made up 28% of real GDP, according to the report. That compares with 76% in the US, 67% in Brazil, 60% in Japan, 59% in Germany, and 52% in India.
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