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Global Times: 75 years of evolution: China's consumption evolves and unfolds unlimited potential

BEIJING, Sept. 24, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- It's 9 pm on Beijing's Chang'an Avenue.

Thirty-year-old Ma Yuqiang, an experienced cyclist from Beijing, waits patiently at a busy intersection, eager for the green light to continue his ride.

Interestingly, the same bicycle congestion has caught Ma's parents before, in the 1980s.

Yet, it is the younger Ma's bike that reflects a sea change in Chinese people's consumption pattern. His bike costs 100,000 yuan ($14,202), while his father's was less than 200 yuan.

In documentaries documenting China in the 1980s, scenes of bicycle flows carrying plainly dressed Chinese along Chang'an Avenue are iconic. For people back then, bicycles were their means of transportation and even the most valuable "asset" in their homes. China is known as the "bicycle kingdom" in the world.

"In the 1970s, my father's Phoenix brand 28-inch bicycle was the pride of our family. Bikes were the vehicle of transportation for most people back then, and in the 1980s, the streets and alleys of Beijing were full of cyclists and a sea of bicycles is parked in front of Tian'anmen Square," Ma recalled.

Decades have passed, and although China remains the world's foremost bicycle kingdom, both the cyclists and the bicycles they ride have undergone tremendous changes, reflecting an evolving picture of Chinese people's consumption pattern.

Since the founding of the People's Republic of China 75 years ago, with the deepening of market-oriented reforms, China's commercial circulation and consumption have achieved historic leaps, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said in a post on its website on September 11.

The scale of retail sales has steadily expanded, the consumption structure has been continuously optimized and upgraded, the supply market has gradually improved, and the quality and efficiency of the circulation system have continued to improve, noted the NBS.

From function to fun

After turn of the century, as Chinese consumers pursue efficiency and productivity and China's cities grew larger, millions of Chinese switched from bicycles to cars. This shift, alongside the growth of China's automotive industry, spurred a surge in car ownership, making China the world's largest automotive market. According to NBS data, China's car ownership reached 49.7 units per 100 households by the end of 2023, 2.9 times that of 2013.

The shift from bicycles to cars was just the tip of the iceberg in changing Chinese consumption patterns. The other big-ticket items of the average Chinese household also experienced a giant leap to greater quantity and quality with Chinese people's growing income, benefiting domestic and foreign companies in the process.