Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 09, 2015

The bright side of the pollution - Ian Johnson

Ian Johnson
Ian Johnson
Beijing underwent for the first time a code red for pollution: officially the worst air quality ever. But the air had been worse before, even a week earlier. Beijing-based journalist Ian Johnson sees a silver lining on the code red: the people and the politicians start to see things have to change, he writes in the New York Review of Books. And that is good new for the Paris talks.

Ian Johson:
This awareness began to result in concrete policy changes. By late 2012, the government had set up its own monitoring stations across China. Two young Chinese app designers came up with what I think is still the best app for measuring air quality,China Air Quality Index. It has measurements for 411 cities across China, allowing one to watch, in almost pathological detail, pollution clouds sweep across the country. 
Around that time I talked to the developers. They said that most of the downloads were probably from foreigners, but they noted that more and more Chinese seemed to be downloading. This feeling was reinforced in 2013 when I spent a couple of weeks in what was then China’s most polluted city, the steel city of Handan. The dubious distinction has since moved slightly north to Baoding, but both cities are similar for lying in the middle of the highest concentrations of steel production in the world, all powered by coal. As I wrote in an article then, discontent was growing even among steel workers—the people whose jobs were on the line. 
I was especially struck by an official I met from the local Communist Party school. She told me that the party realizes that discontent is growing and is instructing officials to make sure that factory pollution controls really were being used—and not just purchased and switched off to save money and increase production. 
Does any of this have relevance for the Paris climate talks? I think so. The (overwhelmingly) men who run the Chinese government may be authoritarian, but climate-change deniers they are not. They are too technocratic for that; for them, it has always been a very hard-nosed political calculation: burning less coal and shutting down industry is costly and potentially destabilizing. If you—the West—want this done, you help us pay for it. It matters more to you than to us. 
This is still China’s position, but the wave of pollution sweeping through the capital makes it harder for Chinese negotiators to play hardball. If the negotiations are seen to fail because of China’s intransigence, that will filter back to Beijing through the haze of censorship and, slowly, create resentment. It won’t lead to a political code red, but will be another cause for dissatisfaction in a country where the economy is already slowing. As perverse as it might be, the Chinese capital’s airpocalypse may be in its best long-term interests.
More in the New York Review of Books

Ian Johnson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers´ request form.

Are you looking for more experts on political change at the China Speakers Bureau? Do check out this list.

The search for quality. Ian Johnson discusses what China´s Yuppies are looking for

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Why Paris is the best shopping city for Chinese - Rupert Hoogewerf

Rupert Hoogewerf
Rupert Hoogewerf
Many cities look try to lure massive spending Chinese tourists, but Paris is year after year a winner, also when it comes to what they spend per capita. China Rich List founder Rupert Hoogewerf explains the magic of France´s capital in the Jakarta Post, and the challenges for competitors.

The Jakarta Post:
France outstrips its Mediterranean neighbours when it comes to the "Peking Pound". A Chinese tourist will spend up to 900 euros ($1,029) in Spain, but in Paris the amount jumps to 1,500 euros a visit. The capital is the top tourist destination in the world - with about 32.3 million visitors in 2013 - and the Chinese formed the fifth-largest group of visitors after the UK, the United States, Germany and Italy. 
Paris is also the preferred shopping city in the world among the Chinese, according to Global Blue, a tourism shopping tax refund service provider. Rupert Hoogewerf, founder and compiler of the Hurun China Rich List and other research material regarding China's elite, says France consistently rates highly among the country's super rich. "The appeal of Paris is enormous: wine, luxury, art, food. There's an element of that high, extended lifestyle. In Hurun's Best of the Best List 2015, France comes in second to Australia for top international luxury travel destination, beating the Maldives and Dubai, and Air France ranks higher than British Airways for its first and business class travel. 
"French brands have built up a cachet and it's had a huge impact on China. Chanel is the queen of luxury for women. Hermes and LV (Louis Vuitton) are popular with Chinese men," Hoogewerf says. 
"As the Chinese domestic luxury market has flattened out because of high prices and the anti-corruption drive, there has been this overseas shopping spree. It's putting pressure on the brands, and it's a real headache for them. They need to maintain that standard of service. Someone who buys a watch in Switzerland will expect that level of service in China. It's a challenge."
More in the Jakarta Post.

Rupert Hoogewerf is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers´ request form.

At the China Speakers Bureau we see seven major trends for 2015. Check here for our list.  

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

China's consumers move away from blink - Shaun Rein

ShaunRein2
Shaun Rein
Paris and Europe in general are losing track as hot spots for buying luxury goods, as the crisis hits China's middle class, and consumers move from luxury goods to lifestyle, tells business analyst Shaun Rein in WSJ. "Why buying expensive goods, if you cannot have clean water and air?"

While the top-end of luxury buying remains strong, the major shift +Shaun Rein sees in the middle-class, who bought most luxury goods anyway. In the first quarter luxury buying in Europe by Chinese only grew 18%, and numbers might be even more on the way down, as Chinese cut spending back in a slowing economy.

Shaun Rein  is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.



China Weekly Hangout

What do Chinese tourists want, asked the +China Weekly Hangout on April 14 Roy Graff of +ChinaContact. We discussed the increasingly diversifying market of Chinese tourists. And yes, there is no longer one answer for basic questions. Moderation by +Fons Tuinstra of the China Speakers Bureau.

Coming Thursday 25 July at the +China Weekly Hangout corruption and healthcare are on the agenda.You can read our announcement here, but when you also follow our Google+ page, you won't miss any announcements.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, April 12, 2013

What are Chinese tourists buying? - Wei Gu

Wei Gu
Wei Gu
Chinese tourists have taken over cities like Paris and Milan, purchasing large amounts of luxury goods. WSJ's wealth editor Wei Gu gives a few tips for foreign companies. Stay out of China, and do not expect to make money on food and hotels.

Only three percent of the Chinese have a passport, so what cities like Milan and Paris are seeing is only the top of the relatively better-off Chinese tourists, Wei Gu explains. Two reasons have the Chinese to shop for their luxury brands abroad. First, it is cheaper, because of the unfavorable tax for foreign luxury products in China. And second, the snobbish element: they do not want to be seen with a Louis Vuitton bag their maid can also buy in China. They prefer products that are not available in China, so it is an important strategic decision for foreign brands to stay out of China.

And while Chinese tourist splash out a lot of money for luxury good, they save on food and hotels. They travel in groups, prefer to stay in budget hotels and  do not want to spend too much on (Chinese) food. At least, not yet.

Wei Gu is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

Getting money out of the pockets of Chinese is not easy. But apart from luxury goods, education is high on the agenda. The China Weekly Hangout discussed February 7 whether that is a smart investment, is education a goldmine or a black hole. Present are +Paul Fox and +Andrew Hupert, moderated by +Fons Tuinstra

.  
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

China tourist purpose in Paris: buy, buy, buy

La_Fayette 018
La_Fayette 018 (Photo credit: Fantake)
Even when you are familiar with all the figures on luxury sales to Chinese tourists, a visit to La Fayette Galleries in Paris is still revealing. 
On many places in the city, you could meet those herds of Chinese tourists, although often Japanese seemed to outnumber them, perhaps with the exception of the Arc de Triomf. But since most Chinese tourists travel in tour groups, my impression could be based on a wrong observatoin. A few buses half an hour later could make all the difference. France is anyway the fourth most popular tourist destination for Chinese tourists, and for them La Fayette is a must.
Chinese tourists certainly outnumber any other nationality in La Fayette. (Here are a few pictures) Here you could see the real purpose of their stay in Paris: buy, buy, buy. We visited La Fayette on a slow day, in the surrounding streets I only counted a dozen buses (quite a number from the Netherlands). But La Fayette absorbed them with ease.
The store was equipped with all tools to mange huge crowds, but all the guards, barriers to close down shops and other queuing measures were not needed during our visit.
Stairs were dotted with exhausted buyers handling larger numbers of shopping bags. The first question asked when customers entered the door: where are the bargains? The ground floor had cleverly no bargains, but higher up, they were abundant. 
Apart from the huge dome ("Is this a church", asked one visitor, "Yes, a kind off", I told her), only the size of the story is really different from what I have seen elsewhere. All the luxury brands were there, and look like they would look in Shanghai, Hong Kong or any other place. But the momentum created a great buying atmosphere.
One of the main reasons is the price difference: In mainland China imported luxury products are heavily taxed. But even when China's taxes would be cancelled (and that would be a good idea), places like La Fayette still seem to attract Chinese customers, more than museums. 
Fortunately, for those who a tired of shopping and still have to wait for a bus to pick them up, around la Fayette there were pretty decent Chinese restaurants.
When you have been craving for decent Chinese food for months, those restaurants are pretty ok. but to manage the crowds, those restaurants present the food in fast-food style, with counters where dimsum is actually heated up in a microwave! You know the quality can be a lot better, but it did not stop us, nor other customers.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, October 24, 2011

Helen Wang to visit London, Paris, Europe

Helen Wang
Helen Wang, the author of the leading book, The Chinese Dream: The Rise of the World's Largest Middle Class and What It Means to You, will be visiting London early December on the invitation of Lord Wei. She will also visit Paris and other parts of Europe and is available for speeches.

On Monday 5 December she will be talking in the Asia House in London on the invitation of Lord Wei of Shoreditch. From the invitation:
In The Chinese Dream, a groundbreaking book about the rising middle class in China, business consultant and China expert Helen Wang challenges us to recognize that some of our fears about China are grossly misplaced. As a result of China’s new capitalist paradigm, a burgeoning middle class – calculated to reach 800 million within the next fifteen years – is jumping aboard the consumerism train and riding it for all it’s worth – a reality that may provide the answer to America’s economic woes. And with China’s increasing urbanization and top-down governmental approach, it now faces increasing energy, environmental, and health problems – problems that the U.S. can help solve. Through timely interviews, personal stories, and a historical perspective, China-born Wang takes us into the world of the Chinese entrepreneurial middle class to show how a growing global mindset and the realization of unity in diversity may ultimately provide the way to creating a saner, safer world for all.
Lord Wei of Shoreditch is a social entrepreneur, interested in social reform, and a citizen with a keen interest in developing civil society solutions to social problems. Nat was a former advisor with the government on the Big Society, works with the Community Foundation Network to develop local responses to the Big Society, and serves in the House of Lords as the youngest and only active Chinese peer. 'Lord Wei currently sits as the Chair to the All Party Parliamentary Group on East Asian Business and also as the Treasurer to the All Party Parliamentary Group on Chinese in Britain.

Helen Wang is available for other speeches in Europe.

Helen Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. Or you can fill in our speakers' request form. More information on 

Helen Wang at Storify.


Enhanced by Zemanta