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Baby boom fuels gold rush

Updated: 2011-02-21 10:42

By Zhang Ran (China Daily)

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Baby boom fuels gold rush

A child stands in front of imported milk powder products on shelves at a shop in Nanjing, capital city of East China's Jiangsu province. [Photo / China Daily] 

Higher incomes and economic growth create opportunities for baby-product makers

BEIJING - Rising disposable income and the desire to give their children the best of facilities are triggering a surge in baby-product sales among Chinese "baby boomers" - those born during or after the 1980s.

Buoyed by the increased consumption, manufacturers are leaving no stone unturned to cash in on the "fourth baby boom" expected to last until 2015 and are increasingly using traditional channels and the Internet to push sales.

Although the babies' and yongsters' products industry is still in its infancy, companies are now moving up the value chain to cash in on China's robust economic growth.

Like many other successful entrepreneurs, Hu Chao has seen the wheel turn a full circle. The agony of the initial years has been replaced by the sweet smell of success.

But that was not the case 10 years ago, when Hu left a comfortable and well-paid job in Silicon Valley and decided to test the fledgling e-commerce waters in China.

Thinking out of the box at that time, Hu set up a domestic e-commerce website for selling baby products. But sadly, it was a boom that was over even before it started.

Her business plan of selling diapers online should have been a cakewalk for the entrepreneur. But Hu found to her frustration that most of the online netizens were youngsters without babies, while most mothers were yet to understand the finer nuances of the Web and online shopping.

Since then, much water has flown under the bridge. Over the years Hu has built up a sophisticated and successful multi-channel retail model to sell maternity and baby products.

The tide started turning after 2005, with nearly 16 to 18 million new babies being born every year in China. The "fourth baby boom" was at its peak in 2007 and 2008, the Year of the Pig according to the Chinese calendar and the year the Olympics were held in Beijing. Young Chinese couples believed that people born during these years would be blessed with tremendous good fortune and luck.

The current baby boom is expected to last until 2015 and will see China having more than 100 million children under the age of 6 every year. In 2009 alone, 16 million babies were born, bringing the number of children aged 6 and under to around 170 million, with 70 million of these from the cities.

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According to the National Bureau of Statistics, nearly 30 percent of the total expenditure of urban families is on infants or children. With most of the Chinese families adopting a "4+2+1" pattern, the annual spend on a child by the extended family has also increased considerably.

The "4+2+1 family" refers to four grandparents, two parents and a child.

That in turn, has helped push revenues for baby and childcare-product manufacturers.

According to a report from Boston Consulting Group, the market value of China's baby industry alone - including food, garments, toys and related products - was around 130 billion yuan ($19.7 billion) in 2009 with an annual growth rate of 17 percent until 2012.

By 2005, the annual revenue of Leyou Dakang Technology Inc, the company set up by Hu and her husband Gong Dingyu, a former executive with Microsoft China, crossed the 100 million yuan mark.

Leyou is now one of China's largest specialty retailers, selling more than 10,000 different products, including maternity dresses, diapers, milk powder, nursing bottles, toys and clothes. The company sells seven categories of products from 530 suppliers in 23 countries.

Leyou now owns about 140 stores spread across seven cities in northern China including Beijing, Tianjin, Shenyang and Xi'an.

For Leyou, the decision to shift its marketing focus from online to offline sales has proved to be lucky as the dotcom downturn of 2001 led to the closure of many e-commerce companies. In March 2001, Leyou took the first offline step by opening a store at Jiaodaokou in Beijing.

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