Bangkok Post

Kitchen kings shift focus to exports

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MILAN: While design aficionado­s flock to Milan from around the globe for the world’s largest furniture fair, Italy’s kings of kitchen style are looking beyond its borders to beat a sluggish domestic market.

As the six-day “Salone del Mobile” got under way in Italy’s fashion capital on Tuesday, the country’s kitchen design industry was celebratin­g a 3.2% growth in exports last year.

The event hosts more than 2,450 exhibitors, of whom nearly a quarter are foreign. Last year, it attracted around 300,000 visitors from 165 countries.

The €779 million ($961 billion) generated by the kitchen sector is behind only Germany and China.

Consultanc­y firm Bain & Company estimates that the global design market grew 4% in 2017 to €35 billion, a figure that is destined to triple over the next 10 years.

Milan’s Centre for Industrial Studies (CSIL) says global kitchen exports are expected to reach $6.7 billion in 2021, an increase of about 20% from 2016.

And with the country slowly emerging from the global financial crisis, companies are capitalisi­ng on Italy’s reputation for style abroad to give themselves a place at the table.

“We realised (during the crisis) that it was time for us to focus on exports,” Paolo Zampieri, head of Zampieri Cucine, a small company that employs 34 people, said.

“The domestic market was once more than enough, but the purchasing power in our country has diminished and the competitio­n is very strong.”

The crisis has sped up the concentrat­ion of the sector.

“Twenty years ago, there were 300 kitchen companies in Italy, today there are around 100. Six companies account for around half of production and 30% of exports,” CSIL research director Aurelio Volpe told AFP.

After being almost invisible abroad for the best part of a decade, exports account for 35% of Zampieri Cucine’s sales.

The company is experienci­ng doubledigi­t growth and others in the sector are benefittin­g from a more outward outlook.

“These companies have found a release valve in the export market. Even small businesses have found niches abroad,” said Volpe.

Veneta Cucine is one of Italy’s big six, and group controller Denise Archiutti said that the “companies that have managed to survive the crisis have become bigger, more productive and more technologi­cally flexible”.

“Production logic has changed, with increasing­ly personalis­ed products made to measure and at the moment of order,” she added.

France is the industry’s largest export market — as it is for the furniture sector as a whole — and where last year it saw a 10.7% increase in sales, followed by the United States and Switzerlan­d.

Volpe notes that Italy is playing to a more refined market than number one exporter China, which mostly sells low-cost kitchens to the United States.

Meanwhile Volpe says that Italian exports to China “have recorded an increase of 50% in a year.”

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 ?? AFP ?? A kitchen is pictured at the Haecker stand during the Salone del Mobile, Milan’s internatio­nal furnishing and design fair on Tuesday.
AFP A kitchen is pictured at the Haecker stand during the Salone del Mobile, Milan’s internatio­nal furnishing and design fair on Tuesday.

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