China’s food industry enters uncertain 2023 amid end to zero-Covid policy

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China’s Food Industry Enters Uncertain 2023

Until social unrest in November forced China’s Communist Party to abandon its tough Covid-19 controls, the country’s packaged food industry seemed in decent shape to produce solid growth in 2023.

Data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed the cumulative retail value of grain, oil and food products produced in China were worth CNY903.2bn (US$130bn) in the first half of 2022, up 9.9% year-on-year. But this was before protests erupted across the country and Beijing abandoned its stringent zero-Covid policy, sparking surging infections that will challenge the Chinese economy in this new year.

A spokesperson for Danone shortly before Christmas told Just Food that “on consumption patterns, the current sanitary situation in China makes consumer trends quite unpredictable at the moment”. China’s official data continue to show low infection figures and few deaths despite media reports hospitals and morgues are overwhelmed.

That uncertainty is underlined by the fact some observers believe the lifting of the strict controls on movement could in fact boost the economy, despite the resulting increase in infections. Dan Wang, the chief economist at Hang Seng Bank (China), predicts economic activities will start to return to normal after an initial few months of surging infections. “Catering, tourism, entertainment, business travelling and events, which were depressed the most during lockdowns, will be among the first to revive,” Wang says, boosting packaged retail food sales.

Chim Lee, a China/Asia analyst for the UK-based Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), predicts the end of China’s zero-Covid policy will have a mixed but – ultimately – net-positive impact on packaged food sales. Lee notes that, relative to other retail categories, food sales were a bright spot in 2022, as the packaged food industry benefited from people stockpiling food in anticipation of lockdowns and other restrictions on mobility. Lee, however, emphasises how the impact has been mixed across categories.

“Over the last few quarters, [parts of] the sector – such as some snack brands – has been suffering from weak consumer sentiment as China’s economic outlook deteriorated under the ‘Zero Covid’ policy but China’s exit from Zero Covid will lead to a recovery in consumer confidence, which will likely benefit the sector eventually, although the short-term effect could be a bit shaky as people stop hoarding packaged food,” added Lee.

Research and intelligence company group GlobalData – Just Food’s parent company – is also bullish, noting the overall value sales of packaged food in China crossed the US$1trn milestone in 2022, with an increase projected in 2023. GlobalData says meat, dairy, soy, bakery and cereals are set to be the largest categories in 2023, contributing well over half of overall packaged food sales in China by value.