Global significance of China's middle class
Updated: 2013-02-08 09:05
By Andrew Moody and Lv Chang (China Daily)
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"Even Samsung, which has been the market leader, is losing share. It is cheaper Chinese brand smartphones such as Lenovo, Coolpad and Huawei which are the big gainers," he says.
"This shows the extreme sensitivity of China's consumers to price," he says.
Ross says there are many difficulties in trying to assess whether people are middle class in China by the consumer choices they make.
"In the US or Europe, McDonald's or KFC, for example, would be considered very cheap and available even to those with very low incomes," he says.
"In China these are relatively higher priced, not bottom of the price range, items. This is why, for example, a KFC restaurant in China has far more 'eat in' tables than a KFC in the US or Europe."
Martin Jacques, author of When China Rules the World: The Rise of the Middle Kingdom and the End of the Western World, believes attempts to define the middle class in China can be hopelessly vague.
"We have got to remember the middle class is a pretty nebulous category. What essentially is the middle class in China and the developing world? Is it really just the new urban classes who have got a bit of money they didn't have before. It is essentially an urban concept."
Kerry Brown, director of the China Studies Centre at Sydney University, has just completed a book, provisionally titled Shanghai 2020, which will have a foreword by the incoming Shanghai mayor Yang Xiong, which examines the middle class in perhaps China's most middle class city.
"In Shanghai you have an authentic middle class because they regard themselves as stakeholders and they are quite demanding in terms of what service they expect from the government," he says.
"The middle class is fairly well networked and a great stabilizer of society. You certainly don't pick fights with the middle class in Shanghai."
Brown adds the middle class in China's second largest city can be loosely defined by the fact that they increasingly want greater control over their lives.
"They are also making choices. They don't have one child because of the one-child policy but for economic reasons so they can give that child a good education. They are also making choices about financial products such as life insurance and pensions."
Gerth at Oxford University says the Chinese middle class could be dismissed as just another nouveau riche phenomenon with people buying branded goods just to make statements about who they are.
"It probably is some sort of nouveau riche phenomenon but it is more of an intensified example of something familiar to us. It is not that it somehow hasn't happened anywhere else. Chinese people aren't Martians," he says.
Atsmon at McKinsey & Co says the significant difference between the new Chinese middle class and that of the US and Europe is they are entering this strata of society in a different era.
When Westerners became middle class, he argues, there were far few choices available.
"As consumers there are far more choices to make and being middle class is a much more complex thing than it was 80 to 100 years ago," he says.
Contact the writers at andrewmoody@chinadaily.com.cn and lvchang@chinadaily.com.cn
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