综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

CHINA> Focus
Tweeny bit spoilt
By Nan Du (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-08 09:30

Tweeny bit spoilt

Parents and experts are increasingly worried that young Chinese, such as these teenagers at Xidan shopping area in Beijing, have become the family's biggest consumers. [Jiang Dong/China Daily] 

Ma Qing sits on the sofa holding her knees, trying to hold back her tears. Her 11-year-old daughter Mengmeng has been weeping in her room for hours because Ma refused to buy a dress for her. The 36-year-old mother believes the strapped dress made by a famous label is too expensive and revealing. But it seems she has to compromise.

Before locking herself inside, Mengmeng protested: "Mom, you have no right to interfere with my choice." She has already "persuaded" her mom to allow her lipstick, nail polish, wedge heels and corset by going on "hunger strike".

Ma has been losing ground, ever since the girl started earning her own money.

Six years ago, Mengmeng earned 300 yuan ($43) as a flower girl at her aunt's wedding. When a wedding ceremony company asked her parents if she could appear at other weddings, Ma and her husband thought it would be a good way for Mengmeng to broaden her horizons and learn how to manage money.

Related readings:
Tweeny bit spoilt Children get pennywise
Tweeny bit spoilt President Hu visits children ahead of Children's Day
Tweeny bit spoilt Post-80s: The vexed generation?
Tweeny bit spoilt For Gen 90s, college exam no longer test of survival

Tweeny bit spoilt The war between the 80s and the 90s

For three years, the Guangzhou high school student spent her weekends and holidays as a flower girl and earned 4,000 yuan each year. She stopped attending weddings three years ago but still amassed a considerable sum. Moreover, Ma and the teachers find Mengmeng to be more mature and confident than her friends, though the flipside is she is no longer satisfied with simple gifts.

Tweeny bit spoilt

Actually, Mengmeng is not the only demanding child. Ma's friend, a university lecturer in Shanghai, recently bought an Audi A4 for 300,000 yuan ($43,900) but his son, who is about the same age as Mengmeng, still says it isn't good enough, since some of his classmates' parents are driving more expensive limos.

"What's happening with today's children? Why are they so different from us when we were young?" Ma sighs.

Numerous Chinese parents are faced with the same dilemma. On Children's Day the Southern Metropolis Weekly carried a series of reports that revealed some striking facts about Chinese children's consumption demands.

Almost overnight, Chinese parents have discovered their children are the family's biggest consumers. Some analysts say that a "tween" generation bent on materialistic pursuits has appeared in China.

In 2003, popular US author Martin Lindstrom discussed the consumption needs of "tweens" (children aged 9-14) around the world in BRANDchild: Inside the Minds of Today's Global Kids: Understanding Their Relationship with Brands.

Based on a survey of children in 11 countries, Lindstrom estimated that although the tweens still relied on their parents, they already had an independent sense of brand values. Tweens spent $1 trillion a year and influenced their parents' choices in purchasing at least 60 percent of brand products.

Tweens are heavily influenced by the media and absorb an average of 40,000 advertisements every year - almost 110 per day. An estimated $25 billion worth of ads was spent on advertising that targeted the youngsters.

   Previous page 1 2 Next Page  

 

 

类乌齐县| 墨竹工卡县| 察隅县| 北碚区| 景东| 深圳市| 林周县| 沿河| 韶山市| 原阳县| 上栗县| 新宾| 武汉市| 大新县| 烟台市| 大渡口区| 中牟县| 双牌县| 北碚区| 京山县| 临沭县| 常熟市| 河津市| 元谋县| 招远市| 治多县| 竹溪县| 蒙山县| 化德县| 济阳县| 乌兰浩特市| 固原市| 昌黎县| 卓资县| 郎溪县| 都匀市| 广平县| 昌平区| 芜湖市| 九江县| 广饶县|