Chinese virtual shoppers opt to purchase baby goods from abroad, stating the foreign brands’ superior quality and economical prices, according to a Want China Times report.
In 2014, China has recorded a total of 20-million increase from its previous year’s 18 million shoppers who buy overseas baby goods via Web-based platforms. Among the items they are buying are baby clothes and baby food.
According to the report, Chinese e-shoppers spent a total of 216 billion yuan for baby goods in 2013, increasing to 1 trillion yuan in 2014.
The report also showed that the most active buyers are the young mothers whose purchased items include clothing, make-ups, diapers, baby lotion, health foods and milk powder.
Japan-based e-commerce and Internet firm Rakuten Global Market stated that about three-quarter of its foreign customers are Chinese. Its March 18 announcement also remarked that sales in China have grown to a more-than-double figure within a one-year period.
According to the Japanese company, its Chinese customers typically bought wet tissues, thin mattresses, diapers and cosmetics.
In a Dec. 2014 China Daily report, a Nielsen study revealed that Chinese are keen in buying overseas goods online.
From the poll’s 4,500 respondents, 32 percent stated that they buy goods from abroad via e-commerce sites. Almost half of the surveyed adult Internet users were women.
Among the products that the respondents buy, mother-and-baby goods came at the third spot, occupying a 30-percent share on the pie. Apparel, accessories and handbags comprised 43 percent, while personal care and cosmetic products occupied 41 percent.