Owing to recent scares involving the domestic food industry, China's middle class is increasingly turning to imported products, report Wang Zhuoqiong and Tang Zhihao
Xia Lili, the mother of a 1-year-old, is a frequent visitor to the imported food section of supermarkets. In her trolley usually sit products wrapped in packages with foreign names and images, from milk powder and coffee to health products.
"I buy foreign food products not because I'm rich, but because I'm afraid of some domestic food items" said Xia, who manages a department store in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province.
"As a mother, you want to provide safe food to your children and family," said Xia, who got her college degree in Singapore. Products made abroad often are of a higher quality, she added.
The preference for international food brands is becoming more obvious among Chinese urban consumers, who have grown increasingly aware of food safety issues, said Gao Jianfeng, general manager of the Shanghai-based Bogo Consultants.
He said imported food - which used to be rare and expensive in supermarkets and department stores - is no longer very pricey.
The recent surge in domestic commodity prices, driven by inflation and higher costs, has made foreign food products more affordable, Gao said.
The government's efforts to lower tariffs on imported food also made such items more accessible to Chinese consumers, said Zhao Ping, deputy director of the department of consumer economics at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation of the Ministry of Commerce.
For instance, European cookies used to be considered high-end bakery products, she said. But now small-size bags of those products are sold for about 10 yuan ($1.59).
As a result, sales of imported food are on the rise among large retailers.
At Metro Cash & Carry China, the German self-service wholesale retailer, imported food products make up 15 percent of the food products on offer, having 1,800 items.
Imported food is a crucial and very successful business for Metro China, showing an annual growth rate between 20 and 30 percent and accounting for more than 55 percent of the company's sales in the Asia-Pacific region, said Patricia Spittau, head of the imported food department at Metro China, which operates 63 hypermarkets in 39 cities in China. She said milk, wine and olive oil are among the best sellers.
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