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China's economic boom set to change the planet

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China's economic boom set to change the planet
by Graham Hiscott, Daily Mirror 23/01/2012

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Shoppers rush into Selfridges (pic: PA)

CHINA already has the world’s biggest population – and now it’s got a shopping habit to match.


A booming economy has created vast numbers of newly rich Chinese and thousands are flocking to Britain to splash their cash.

Shops here are braced for another surge over the next few weeks as those with money head abroad to mark Chinese New Year, which begins today.

With their country on course to become the world’s biggest economy, the power of the yuan is set to explode.

For decades, we in Britain have got used to seeing Made in China printed on everything from TVs to clothes.

This trading boom has helped make a relatively few people there very well-off – and in a land of 1.3billion, about 960,000 people are already said to be worth more than £1million.

Many are now on a global spending spree, with designer brands from Mulberry and Burberry to Chanel and Louis Vuitton top of their lists.

Tax-free shopping company Global Blue says they were the biggest spending visitors to the UK last year, overtaking Russians, Japanese and Arabs.

The average Chinese shopper spent £729 on each transaction in December. The average Briton parts with just £130 on a day’s shopping trip.

And with most of these visitors buying far more than one item per trip, the total amount is staggering. At Harrods, they spend a reported £3,500 per visit.


Global Blue’s Richard Brown said: “The Chinese love to buy watches, handbags, jewellery and the latest brands for themselves and as gifts. There is lot of cachet in buying from the top shops in London.”

Harrods and Selfridges, which saw hoards of Chinese shoppers at the Boxing Day sales, have recruited Mandarin-speaking staff to guide them to Dior or Gucci rails.

Elswhere Bicester Village designer discount outlet in Oxfordshire attracts coach loads of Chinese shoppers and there are plans for a £50million holiday village in West Wales.

But it is all part of a wider bonanza for UK firms increasingly reliant on exports to China.

Rolls-Royce said 90% of cars sold last year went abroad, with China overtaking the US as its biggest market.

China, with over £2trillion burning a hole in its pockets, has also been buying or investing in companies around the world.

Last week saw reports of China’s sovereign wealth fund looking to buy a stake of up to 10% in Thames Water.

More than 400 firms there have already bought British businesses. Among our companies either owned or part-owned by Chinese firms are Superdrug, Britain’s largest container port Felixstowe, and car maker MG.

Chancellor George Osborne also flew to Beijing last week to drum-up business. The Centre for Economics and Business Research’s Charles Davis said: “We still call China an emerging market but it has very much arrived. It’s the world’s second-biggest economy.”

There are concerns about China’s dire human rights record but, while the UK and others talk tough about it, they are also keenly aware of the nation’s growing political and economic influence.

As we enter the Year of the Dragon, experts predict the Chinese will breathe fire by buying a FTSE 100 company within 12 months.

Prof Danny Quah of the London School of Economics said: “China’s rising inome will continue to power economic growth in the world, more than that of the US or Western Europe.

“The UK will lag even further behind should we continue to hitch our economic fortunes to those countries that no longer grow.”
 
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We need to use all these US dollars we have been saving up, to buy something that is more real and useful.

Consumer goods are nice, but we should get more intermediate goods (things that we can use as input to create finished products), especially raw materials and resources.
 
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^^^^^
I love Selfridges. These mainlanders learn quick. Who says Chinese consumers cant spend?? I remember refuting that idiocy many times on this forum last year.
 
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Dont waste money on these frivolous things. Whats the use of buying an Omega when a timex will tell the same time.
will you ever put things thats is worth more into a $4000 LV handbag? I am advising this to the whole world since my wife wont listen.

Gong xi Fa Cai
 
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Dont waste money on these frivolous things. Whats the use of buying an Omega when a timex will tell the same time.
will you ever put things thats is worth more into a $4000 LV handbag? I am advising this to the whole world since my wife wont listen.

I agree, but that's how consumption works in modern economies. Most of the things that people buy, are unnecessary for them to live, and do not contribute to their productivity. But it does contribute a lot to the overall economy, by creating demand.

We should do our best to find a balance.

Gong xi Fa Cai

LOL, Gong Hey Fat Choy! :cheers: (That's how we say it in Cantonese).
 
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Enter the dragon: Chinese arrive in numbers


LAST Tuesday the Australian embassy in Beijing issued a record number of visas to Chinese citizens for travel to Australia.

A week earlier, Qantas began flying its biggest aircraft - the double-decked A380 - to Hong Kong and this week Cairns is due to receive a phalanx of charter flights from China during the Chinese New Year holiday.

As Europeans and Americans scale back travel plans and baulk at the strength of the Australian dollar, the Chinese are coming in droves, passing half a million a year for the first time at the end of November, hitting 535,000.

Numbers are expected to climb each year. These figures have soared since 2006, when numbers were 306,000 and for the past half decade China has provided the fastest-growing source of visitors, overtaking Britain and Japan in the past 12 months.

In the 12 months to June 30, Chinese tourists spent $43.6 billion, making them for the first time the largest source of tourist income for Australia.

Company manager Haibin Hao was one of hundreds of Chinese tourists at Captain Cook's cottage in Melbourne's Fitzroy Gardens yesterday. From Heilongjiang province in the country's north he was to celebrate Chinese New Year Eve in Melbourne last night and will be in Auckland for New Year's Day.

"China has had an open policy for 30 years and the people's attitude has greatly changed," he said through an interpreter.

"For Chinese New Year they used to stay home for dumplings. Now they choose to go overseas and see the world. And we want all the world to see China."

Businessman Jia Quan Li and wife Chen Juan from the eastern province of Shandong arrived at the cottage with their two children. Their three-year-old daughter Niu Niu was embracing the wide open spaces.

There was no room for fireworks in their itinerary, with her father saying of New Year celebrations: "We just have dinner".

Ling Zhao is a part-time tour guide, ushering her visitors towards historic sites and places of general interest.

"Australians are friendly people, Australia is the first choice for Chinese," she says.

Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson said the growth of tourists from China had been 20 per cent a year for the past two years.

"We are going to pay a lot of attention to it. It's a bit like Japan in the 1970s and 1980s.

"The Chinese market will develop very much like the Japanese market where we started off with the Approved Destination Scheme, which has been of tremendous value to Australia."

Of the 346,254 visitor applications lodged in 2010-11, 78,690 were from business visitors, with the remainder - 267,564 - being from tourists. "The objective is to get people to come back for a second and third trip," Mr Ferguson said.

Cookies must be enabled | The Australian
 
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We should not brag about being big buyers of luxuries. I'm sure African warlords buy lots of luxuries too... what I hope to see is Chinese luxury goods across the globe.

I agree with you 100%.

Consuming luxury goods is nice, but producing luxury goods ourselves is a thousand times better.
 
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Enjoy your lives as long as the Oil is Cheap and is available, coz after that life will not be the same.
 
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Enjoy your lives as long as the Oil is Cheap and is available, coz after that life will not be the same.

China is one of the least oil dependent countries on the planet. We can fuel everything with coal, hydro and nuclear, and have the political willpower to ban private ICE cars if necessary. The countries that need to worry about peak oil more than others are those who will grind to a halt without private transportation...
 
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China is one of the least oil dependent countries on the planet. We can fuel everything with coal, hydro and nuclear, and have the political willpower to ban private ICE cars if necessary. The countries that need to worry about peak oil more than others are those who will grind to a halt without private transportation...

Very true. :tup:

How China overtook the US in renewable energy - The Guardian

BBC News - China leads world in green energy investment

And China certainly has the willpower to shut down private transport in specific regions if necessary, and get workers to use public transport instead.

And in any case, we have one of the largest coal reserves on the planet. Combine that with our enormous hydroelectric capabilities and other power sources (including nuclear) and we can keep the electricity on for as long as we need.
 
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oh great, we help boost western economies by going over there and buying stuff.

how about buying luxury goods made in china to help boost domestic consumption.

we create jobs and wealth for the west when that money could easily be spent in china.

hopefully with the lowering of the luxury tax, chinese consumers can spend money within china.
 
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We should not brag about being big buyers of luxuries. I'm sure African warlords buy lots of luxuries too... what I hope to see is Chinese luxury goods across the globe.
*cough* Song Mei Ling *cough*

This is an ugly trend :tdown: Not at all a reflection of true national power.
 
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chinese economic boom is only set to change china. not the planet.
From personal experience, Chinese are too money minded to help other for nothing.
 
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