• <nav id="c8c2c"></nav>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <nav id="c8c2c"><sup id="c8c2c"></sup></nav>
        <tr id="c8c2c"></tr>
      • a级毛片av无码,久久精品人人爽人人爽,国产r级在线播放,国产在线高清一区二区

        BIZCHINA> Top Biz News
        China to have 4m wealthy households by 2015: report
        (Xinhua)
        Updated: 2009-04-02 20:20

        China was expected to have more than four million wealthy households by 2015, making it the world's fourth-largest country in terms of the number of wealthy families, trailing the United States, Japan and Britain, an industry report revealed Thursday.

        Related readings:
        China to have 4m wealthy households by 2015: report Chinese consumers concerned about food safety
        China to have 4m wealthy households by 2015: report Luxury consumers still spending big
        China to have 4m wealthy households by 2015: report Consumers mark World Consumer Rights Day
        China to have 4m wealthy households by 2015: report Consumers gloomy on income front

        The number of wealthy households whose annual income exceed 250,000 yuan ($36, 574) living in urban areas topped 1.6 million last year, according to a research report released by McKinsey & Company Thursday on its website.

        While the wealthy currently accounted for less than one percent of urban Chinese households, the number is expected to grow at an annual rate of 15.9 percent in next five to seven years, said the report.

        The wealthy in China were concentrated in the country's more prosperous eastern and southern regions, with around 30 percent of the wealthy families living in China's four largest metropolitans -- Beijing, eastern Shanghai, southern Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

        Vinay Dixit, director of McKinsey's Asia Consumer Centers, said the current global economic slowdown would affect the spending of even the rich, but that did not lower the importance of China's wealthy consumers to manufacturers, retailers and service providers in many sectors.

        The report also showed that most affluent Chinese consumers were younger than their global peers.

        On average, wealthy consumers in China were 20 years younger than those in the United States and Japan. About 80 percent of those were under 45 in China, compared with 30 percent in the United States and 19 percent in Japan.


        (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)

         

         

        a级毛片av无码
        • <nav id="c8c2c"></nav>
          • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
          • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
          • <nav id="c8c2c"><sup id="c8c2c"></sup></nav>
            <tr id="c8c2c"></tr>