China’s overall economic growth slowed in 2015.The quarterly growth for 2015 was as low as 6.8 per cent. Though clothing categories and cosmetics recorded a 8.8 per cent increase in December.
In the physical space, online retail sales of food, clothing and commodities rose 40.8 per cent, 21.4 per cent and 36 per cent. Online retail sales of physical goods rose 31.6 per cent. Online retail sales of non-physical goods rose 42.4 per cent. Retail sales of consumer goods totaled rose 10.7 per cent over the previous year.
Retail sales of clothing, shoes and textiles increased by only 6.9 per cent in December 2015. Total retail sales were under 10 per cent, a record low for almost 30 years.
Market prices are higher today than they were in 2014, the year when China surpassed the US to become the world’s largest economy (in terms of purchasing power parity). But even at that time China’s economy was already slowing. The growth rate averaged 10 per cent in 1980-2010, but fell to seven to eight per cent from 2012 to 2014.
Moreover, China’s once seemingly inexhaustible surplus of rural labor willing to migrate to urban areas has largely disappeared, causing wages to rise and the country’s competitive advantage in labor-intensive manufacturing to weaken.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Zombie inventory and shrinking margins inside China’s fashion returns meltdown
China’s digital fashion market, long celebrated as the world’s most sophisticated test bed for e-commerce innovation, is facing a destabilising... Read more
Circularity by Design: How EU rules are turning data into fashion’s new currency
The European fashion sector has entered a compressed transition window. Two regulatory confirmations: the revised EU Textile Labelling Regulation (effective... Read more
The Lyst Reset: Chanel and Dior rewrite luxury’s power index
The global luxury hierarchy has been quietly rewritten, and not by sales alone. In Q1 2026, Chanel rose to the... Read more
Inventory, not expansion, defines winners in global apparel
The 2025 fiscal year has crystallised that revenue growth and operational health are no longer moving in tandem. In an... Read more
From growth-at-all-costs to cash discipline, the new economics of DTC fashion
The global direct-to-consumer apparel market is entering a correction phase, as fashion brands across the US, Europe and the UK... Read more
Britain’s Forgotten Growth Engine: Why policy gaps are undermining fashion and t…
Britain’s fashion and textile industry, often framed through the lens of creativity and design, is emerging as a case study... Read more
Beyond price rallies structural reform can strengthen India’s cotton economy
India’s cotton economy is entering a decisive phase, where firmer prices and tighter arrivals in the 2026-27 season have given... Read more
Polyester volatility redraws India’s textile industry competitive map across Asi…
India’s synthetic textile industry has entered a phase of cost instability as polyester staple fibre (PSF) prices rise across domestic... Read more
The £7 Billion Question: Who pays for fashion’s ‘free rental’ habit?
The global fashion industry is facing an uncomfortable paradox: its most valuable customers may also be its most destructive. A... Read more
India, China Bangladesh face fresh headwinds as global apparel markets rebalance
Global apparel trade is entering a more uneven recovery phase, with demand growth persisting but losing uniform momentum across major... Read more












