China Daily (Hong Kong)

Holiday week spending over 1 trillion yuan

Consumers seeking quality products, services, shoring up domestic demand

- By ZHONG NAN and FAN FEIFEI Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese consumers opened their wallet during Spring Festival, not only on things like digital home appliances and imported fresh food but also on experience­s such as travel and entertainm­ent, government figures showed.

Shopping, dining out, travel and entertainm­ent accounted for most of the consumer spending during the week-long holiday. Analysts and officials said the strong domestic demand will inject further growth momentum into the economy in 2019 as the government unveils more policies to spur consumptio­n.

Spending on retail and food services during the Spring Festival period, from Feb 4 to Sunday this year, exceeded 1 trillion yuan ($147.41 billion) for the first time, up 8.5 percent year-on-year, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

The ministry said a key term for Lunar New Year holiday spending was “seeking higher quality” as the government’s emphasis on upgrading consumptio­n continues. Emerging areas for spending such as the internet, customized products, experience­s, digital products and services were growth areas during the holiday.

Zheng Wen, director-general of the ministry’s department of circulatio­n industry developmen­t, said online sales have become an important engine to stimulate domestic spending and imports. “Durable consumer goods with high-tech features and branded foreign products have huge commercial potential,” Zheng said.

Chinese e-commerce giant JD reported robust sales between Feb 3 and Friday, with sales revenue jumping 42.74 percent year-on-year. Smartphone­s, computers and home appliances were the top three items on JD in terms of sales value.

Chinese consumers tend to buy high-quality and diversifie­d products, the company said. Kitchenwar­e sales posted the strongest growth — 399 percent year-on-year. That was followed by furniture and luggage, with their respective sales revenue up 185 percent and 148 percent, JD reported.

China UnionPay, the country’s largest bank card operater by market share, saw its total transactio­n volume over the holiday period reach 1.16 trillion yuan, jumping 71.4 percent yearon-year, the company said on Monday.

“Consumers are more willing to spend money this year. Whether it is filial piety to the elderly or rewarding children or themselves, trading volume has kept growing. Spending on entertainm­ent and travel also grew fast,” said Chen Han, a data analyst at China UnionPay.

Consumptio­n has become the biggest driver for the economy, contributi­ng 76.2 percent of the country’s economic growth last year, up 18.6 percentage points over the previous year, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

“Judging from major economic indicators, domestic demand has become a decisive force of China’s economic growth,” said Wang Bin, deputy director-general of the ministry’s department of market operation and consumptio­n promotion.

Several factors will support steady consumer spending growth in China. Residentia­l income has been increasing fast and deeper pockets facilitate more spending. The second China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai will also offer more access to global products, Wang said.

Wang Jun, a researcher at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, expects more favorable policies to further boost domestic shopping this year as nationwide tax cuts continue.

The National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and other government agencies issued a plan last month to build a powerful domestic consumptio­n market, putting forward 24 policies and measures to promote consumer spending in six areas, including telecommun­ications, automobile­s and elderly and nursing care.

“China will continue to be the world’s largest market for products and services, such as industrial goods, food and healthcare services, which will offer enormous opportunit­ies to global companies,” Wang added.

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