A woman has makeup applied at a street stall in Shanghai. China's skincare product market has developed from $44.83 billion compound annual growth rate in 2002 to $66.6 billion in 2009 and is expected to reach $77.84 billion by 2012, said Serene Wong, CEO of TNS in China. Gao Feng / Bloomberg
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Young people, lured by marketeers, often spend exorbitant amounts on their personal appearance
BEIJING - Beijing office worker Susie Zhang is a skincare manufacturers' dream come true.
The 29-year-old routinely squanders half of her 4,000 yuan monthly salary on facial-care products alone.
A peek in her bathroom reveals a wide array of colorful bottles filled with various liquids and creams lined up like soldiers in formation.
Included are many of the products Zhang applies to her face every morning, including toners, serums, moisturizing lotions, eye creams, sunscreens, makeup base, liquid foundation and loose powder.
"Every evening, I use even more skincare products including scrubs, facial masks and many others. I think skincare and beauty products are an investment that pays you back," said the advertising industry worker.
Just like Zhang, about 68 percent of Chinese consumers agree that spending time and money on their personal appearance is an important aspect of achieving a state of well-being, a report by research firm TNS Research International.
Serene Wong, CEO of TNS in China, said that the skincare product market in China has leapt from $44.83 billion compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in 2002 to $66.6 billion in 2009 and is expected to reach $77.84 billion by 2012. Compound annual growth rate is the year-over-year growth rate of an investment over a specified period of time.
According to the latest report by market research company RNCOS, the Chinese health and beauty aids market is the second largest in the Asia-Pacific region after Japan and the seventh largest in the world.
Data from the RNCOS' report states that an extremely low penetration level and the vast consumer base in China are the two key factors that are catching the attention of skin care manufacturers around the world.
The RNCOS report revealed that increasingly disposable incomes and surging work population in China, would enable the cosmetics industry to post an impressive 12.3 percent CAGR during the 2010 to 2013 period.
However, according to Yu Xiaodong, director of the Public Nutrition and Development Center under the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Chinese society has been overwhelmed by advertising that touts these products as a requirement in the pursuit of a healthy and quality lifestyle.
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