The Jerusalem Post

Safe Sex: Chinese buy condom business as savvy youth spur demand

- By ADAM JOURDAN

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – April Zhang, a 21-year-old student from Shanghai, reflects the fast-shifting attitudes of China’s younger generation­s toward sex. She’s confident to talk about a topic once taboo here and is well educated about the risks.

Zhang and her young contempora­ries – though far from uniform in their views – are much more open in their attitudes to sex than their conservati­ve parents and increasing­ly aware of the need for protection against sexually transmitte­d diseases.

This sex savvy generation is set to spur sharp growth of the country’s condom market, a key driver behind a deal by Chinese investors to buy the world’s no. 2 condom business for $600 million from Australia’s Ansell Ltd.

“Attitudes are certainly changing. We’re increasing­ly open,” said Zhang, adding her friends mostly chose brands like Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc’s Durex and Japan’s top-selling brand Okamoto due to their reputation for high quality as well as their visible marketing campaigns.

“This is a very important product, if it goes wrong just once then the consequenc­e is severe,” she said.

In China’s big cities, condoms are now available in plain view: convenienc­e stores on urban high streets often have condoms on display by the till, while brands like Durex have millions of followers on their China social media platforms.

On supermarke­t shelves Ansell’s brands Jissbon – named to sounds like James Bond – and the higher-end SKYN brand sit alongside an array of local offerings with names like “Endless”, “Pleasure More”, “Double Butterfly” and “Donless.”

Durex is by some distance the best-selling condom brand on Chinese online shopping platform Taobao, followed by Jissbon, Okamoto and local brands SixSex and MingLiu, according to data from Daxue Consulting.

Ansell said on Thursday it had reached an all-cash deal with China’s Humanwell Healthcare Group Co Ltd and CITIC Capital China Partners for its condoms business. Humanwell declined to comment on its strategy for the Chinese and other markets. CITIC couldn’t be immediatel­y reached for comment.

Condoms – and sex – are growing topics in popular culture, despite strict rules on nudity that mean China condom ads are tamer and more limited than in other Asian markets. Young people also chat about the subject online – though they often use code.

Pornograph­y is illegal, but China’s young find ways to watch it nonetheles­s, with an online vernacular growing around its availabili­ty. People who know about the best illegal sites are called “old drivers”, who help others to “find the car”.

The government is helping too, spurred by efforts to raise awareness of illnesses such as HIV/AIDS through high-school sex education textbooks and campaigns with university students. Peng Liyuan, China’s popular First Lady, actively campaigns to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS and how to respond to it.

China’s conservati­ve attitude, ushered in by the Communist Party when it took power in 1949, has slowly been changing – helped by growing affluence, more overseas travel and exposure to foreign popular culture.

It’s far cry from where China was even two decades ago, when more permanent contracept­ive techniques were used once a couple had their first child to avoid further pregnancy. Even now, sterilizat­ion and IUD coils are still far more prevalent methods than condoms.

“Sexual awareness including contracept­ion is slowly rising,” said Wang Xiaoshuang, founder of sex education firm Greenxxoo, pointing to premarital sex which is now broadly accepted. “Twenty years ago that sort of behavior was taboo.”

Wang said that there was an increasing awareness of “safe sex” because of HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns, though added tough rules around advertisin­g condoms meant most brands had to stick to online marketing.

The more open attitude could see China’s condom market more than double in size by 2024 from $1.8 billion in 2015, according to a report from Transparen­cy Market Research.

 ?? (David Gray/Reuters) ?? BOXES OF ANSELL condoms are displayed for sale at a local pharmacy in Sydney, Australia.
(David Gray/Reuters) BOXES OF ANSELL condoms are displayed for sale at a local pharmacy in Sydney, Australia.

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