The China Memo
In 2000, roughly 1.2 billion people in China lived below the threshold where genuine discretionary spending becomes possible. By 2030, roughly the same number are expected to sit at or above it — the largest migration into the global consuming class ever recorded. Yet at this same moment, eighty percent of Chinese consumers say they are actively choosing cheaper products than before, savings rates are up, and the phrase on everyone's lips is 消费降级 — consumption downgrade. This episode works through that contradiction across the full arc: from the ration-coupon shortage economy of the pre-reform era, through the appliance boom and the property decade, to today's phase of value-seeking, deleveraging, and what Chinese researchers are calling the third consumption era. The property bust is the pivot point. With residential property representing roughly seventy percent of urban household assets, and the bulk of paper gains since 2021 now gone, the spending pullback has a structural foundation — it is a rational response to a genuine wealth shock, not a temporary mood. But running alongside that caution is something more interesting: the rise of Guochao, domestic brands chosen not just for price but for cultural identity, particularly among younger consumers in lower-tier cities who carry less debt and more optimism than their urban counterparts. The picture that emerges is not a single consumer curve but several running simultaneously in different directions — and aggregate data hides all of it.
11 episodios
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