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lead story » LIFE & STYLE
SAVING FACE
Holding a Mirror to China’s Beauty Boom BY M A R I A N N A C E R I N I
“You don’t see anything like this anywhere else in the world. Consumers perceive beauty purchases as investments in their career, private life and social success” worker Wang Yan wakes up at 5.30am to give herself enough time to complete her daily beauty regime before her journey to work three hours later. Like many young women her age in China, Wang invests a cosmetics. It’s a trend that has helped propel the country’s beauty industry to record
is an important industry driver. Whitecollar women alone spend an average of 30 percent of their total income on cosmetic treatments and products. Men are not far monitor, the grooming sector – the second largest worldwide after South Korea – has seen an annual growth of 29 percent between 2009 and 2014, compared to 5.7 percent in North America and 7.9 percent in Europe. In a recent survey by consumer ping 73 percent of Chinese men in China’s leading cities believe that looking good is essential for success with both women and work. As Chinese GDP continues to grow, so does the local appetite for skin care products, fragrances and men’s cosmetics. “You don’t see anything like that anywhere else in the world,” says Hutchins. “Consumers perceive beauty purchases as investments in their career, private life and social success. They consider appearances
PHOTO BY NOEMI CASSANELLI
USD25.9 billion on beauty products, making it the country’s fourth largest sector for discretionary expenditure. Only houses, cars and travel rank higher. “In China, your face really is your card to the world,” says Joanna Hutchins, former Unilever Global Brand Director for Skin Care at Pond’s and current Managing Director of Dragon Rouge, a global brand consultancy that counts almost 30 beauty brands among its global clientele. “And that’s the case for both men and women. The way you look, the quality of your skin, whether you appear tired or stressed – those have all become concerns of paramount importance to the Chinese middle class.” This concept of mianzi (face), a social
construct that runs deep within Chinese culture and relies on a person’s surface
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a major asset to their persona. Women want to transform, while men are not as interested in looking different as they are in looking perfect.” less and healthy image often only extends from the neck up. Chinese shoppers aren’t as interested in body products – preserving one’s pale skin by layering on clothes, even in summertime, is still common. Facial skin care forms the most popular sector among the local market. Whitening products are the nation’s highest sellers, followed closely by new-fangled, Chinacentric hydration products – which now represent almost one-third of all facial moisturizer sales in China. It is, quite literally, all about face. A trip to Sephora on Shanghai’s Nanjing Xi Lu – the French company’s largest store worldwide – on a sunny Sunday afternoon packed with young, style-savvy women makeup removers, serums, blemish balm (BB) cream and face masks. “Protecting my skin from the sun is quite important to me,” says 25-year-old Li Haitong, as she browses the store’s selection of pricey, colorfully-packaged balms. “I like to keep it hydrated and natural-looking. Hanskin BB Cream is great for that, but I also use a lot of Laneige products.” Cost, she says, is not an issue. “As long as I can be assured of the quality of the brand, then I’m happy to spend the money.” Both Laneige and BB Cream are Korean companies. In China, they are household names – no doubt due to their connection to South Korea’s hugely successful pop culture wave, the so-called hallyu, which drives Riding on the Korean soap opera and K-pop crazes, these beauty brands from the Land of the Morning Calm and further Korean celebrity ambassadors such as actress Song Hye-kyo, singer Yoona and male entertainer Kim Hyun-joong to advertise
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