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    Tickling the palates of China's hungry middle-class

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    2015-06-10 11:07China Daily Editor: Si Huan

    Barely a week passes without someone, or somewhere, claiming progress in attracting buyers from what is now the world's most influential consumer group-the Chinese middle class.

    The most recent examples dished up a terrific Celtic head-to-head, with Ireland and Scotland delivering fresh export figures within days of each other.

    Dublin drew first blood. The Irish Food Board revealed food and drink exports to China soared 40 percent last year to $612 million, with dairy, pigmeat and seafood topping the list.

    The numbers made all-the-more impact because they were issued as Irish officials welcomed none other than Li Keqiang, the Chinese premier, for a 24-hour overnight stopover en route to Latin America.

    What an opportunity to let Li enjoy the best the Emerald Isle's tourism and agricultural industries could muster.

    He was served home-reared beef (China's only just lifted restrictions on imported Irish beef) and home-made bread and cheese on a visit to a model beef and dairy farm in County Mayo.

    Later he dined with his counterpart, Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny, at the newly renovated five-star Ashford Castle-a medieval pile set in stunning countryside on the Galway-Mayo county border.

    The Irish Farmer's Journal reported a feast of "much-loved" Irish produce including carefully named Galway Bay prawns, Killala Bay mackerel and 40 kilograms of, again, prime beef fillet.

    During his farmhouse lunch, the premier was reported to have said the taste reassured him of the quality and safety of Irish agricultural products.

    It was nothing short of promotional gold-dust for a country which clearly now places China and its increasingly high-spending population as a priority.

    Four hundred miles northeast across the Irish Sea, meanwhile, Dublin's promotional triumph was being jealously monitored in another small market which is equally hungry for middle-class yuan.

    Officials in Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland-who have remarkably similar goals for their tourism and food industries-were also putting out their own export figures, again pushed firmly in the direction of Chinese free-spenders.

    They showed its annual global food exports had surpassed 1.1 billion pounds ($1.7 billion) for the first time, boosted by food and drink to China which jumped 12 percent to $130 million. Fish and seafood volumes, dominated by salmon, soared 92 percent to $65.6 million with strong showings too for Scots honey, cereals and dairy.

    No question the Irish won this particular tit-for-tat.

    This unprecedented competition for Chinese favor is intensifying globally, not just on the edges of Europe.

    In future, however it won't just be about quality produce, it'll be about finding a niche, with national agencies desperate to stamp their presence on a booming market which will become increasingly sophisticated.

    In recent months we've had equally glowing China export figures on everything from British pig's trotters to Peruvian avocados, Canadian table wines, United States lobsters, even Japanese rice.

    In many cases these everyday foods in their own countries are being promoted in China at luxury-goods prices. But that's proving no deterrent whatsoever for aspiring, increasingly cost-and health-savvy Chinese shoppers.

    Already bigger than the entire population of the US, China's middle class is also becoming accustomed to staying at the best hotels, driving the best cars, wearing the best clothes, communicating on the best electronic devices, and the global economic implications are huge.

    McKinsey & Co predicts by 2022 more than three-quarters of China's urban consumers will earn 60,000-229,000 yuan ($9,000-$34,000) salaries, placing them in purchasing-power-parity terms between the average incomes of Brazil and Italy.

    The consultancy also suggests by the end of this year more than a third of the world's new high-end handbags, shoes, watches, jewelry, and ready-to-wear clothing will be bought with Chinese wallets. It's a generation McKinsey calls "the most Westernized to date".

    Not so long ago economists loved the expression, "when the US sneezes, the world catches cold".

    Scotland also revealed recently that Scotch Whisky sales-its most prized export-fell 7 percent to $6.01 billion in 2014. The decline was in part blamed on a 9 percent drop in the United States, its biggest export market by value.

    But officials emphasized also it was due to the ongoing Chinese austerity campaign, where exports crumbled by a quarter to $59.4 million.

    We now live in a world where the Chinese sneeze has become by far the most influential.

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