China Insight: Thriving Fashion Exhibitions Could Boost the Future Development of the Chinese Market

The meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions, or MICE, economy is seeing a robust rebound in China this year.

From Shanghai to Shenzhen, and even in second-tier cities like Dalian, Ningbo, Haining and Zhuzhou, fashion exhibitions are spreading throughout China. Those taking part include international luxury brands; a range of supply chain companies for apparel, footwear and accessories, and numerous industrial clusters. The exhibits encompass jewelry, watches, trendy fabrics, fur fashion, and new woolen products across various niches and specialized fields.

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Data from the National Bureau of Statistics of China shows that in July, the growth rate of social financing slowed down, the decline in the M1 money supply widened to 6.6 percent, total retail sales of consumer goods grew by 2.7 percent year-on-year, with the growth rate increasing by 0.7 percentage points compared to the previous month, and the value added by industry above a designated size increased by 5.1 percent, with the growth rate falling by 0.2 percentage points compared to the previous month.

The latest data makes clear that the overall growth of China’s economy has “slowed down and improved in quality,” which is in line with the judgment of the situation at the Political Bureau meeting on July 30: “Domestic effective demand is insufficient, the economic operation is divergent, the hidden risks in key areas are still relatively high, and there are temporary difficulties in the transformation from the old growth drivers to the new ones.”

From the public’s perspective, a series of record-breaking “new lows” continues to emerge in areas such as consumption, employment and lending. However, at the macro level, financial policies that “squeeze out the water” indeed significantly favor the “real economy.”

In the next phase, as huge amounts of credit flows into the manufacturing sector, the market is bound to face the problem of capacity digestion — how to achieve a balance between supply and demand through various strategies and measures. In short, the current fundamentals of the Chinese market remain unchanged: a weak real estate sector, more goods being produced than consumed, and external demand being stronger than internal demand.

Against this backdrop, and in stark contrast to the bleak data, a succession of fashion shows held across China in August to some extent is helping to spearhead the fashion industry’s growth in the second half.