Advertisement
Will Covid-19 chills and slumping economy keep China from becoming world’s largest luxury goods market?
- A confluence of macroeconomic factors appears to have stirred up an increasing amount of self reflection among China’s young middle-class shoppers and suppressed their appetite for spending
- Analysts at Bain & Company, Oliver Wyman and home-grown consultancy Yaok Institute, however, believe that China is still on a path to becoming the world’s largest luxury goods market
Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
1
Simon Fu, a 32-year-old Shanghai fashionista, used to hang out at the city’s most popular luxury shopping centre every week before Covid-19 struck.
Advertisement
This year, he has not been to Plaza 66 even once.
In early 2020, he returned from Tokyo with suitcases full of luxury fashion items, a habit cultivated and shared by most Chinese consumers of luxury products shopping abroad to take advantage of tax arbitrage.
But then lockdowns and work-from-home arrangements kicked in, and a realisation dawned on Fu – there were no occasions to show off his expensive outfits.
This realisation occurred in parallel with concerns about a slumping economy and the rising unemployment around him.
Advertisement
Advertisement