Sex toys in China are not hard to find. They’re sold in “adult health” shops around the country, available in hotel minibars and even on sale by the checkout counter at some convenience stores, next to the gum and candy.
This is peculiar in a country where just 30 years ago, public criticism erupted when a magazine published a picture of a couple kissing on its back cover.
The about-face in attitudes towards sex in China — which began when the prudish Chinese Communist Party government launched its opening and reform drive in the late 1970s and has been catalyzed by the Internet — is creating a prime business opportunity for the sex toy industry, insiders say.
The market will grow to about 40 billion yuan (US$6.4 billion) by 2014 from approximately 10 billion yuan at the end of last year, said Lin Degang, chief executive of online sex toy retailer www.oyeah.com.cn.
“Within five years, sex toys will be a common commodity for everyday use,” he told reporters. “Sex toys will be a key element of a fashionable lifestyle.”
Sex toys have become so ubiquitous that various kinds of vibrators can even be bought at FamilyMart Co (全家便利超商) convenience stores throughout Shanghai. With price tags of between US$15 and US$17, they are sold by the cashier along with condoms.
Highlighting expectations of a strong upward trajectory in domestic sales, two private equity firms in August jointly invested 300 million yuan into Love Health Science & Technology Co Ltd, the biggest Chinese sex toy manufacturer.
Sex toys have existed in China for centuries. The concubines of Chinese emperors who failed to find sexual satisfaction often turned to them and there were also sex toys for men, said Peng Xiaohui (彭曉輝), a professor of sexology at Central China Normal University in the city of Wuhan.
Their use was forced underground after the Chinese Communist Party took over the country in 1949 and adopted policies aimed at repressing people’s personal desires, including romance and sex, in favor of ideas of revolution and collectivism.
Even teenagers were officially “forbidden” to have crushes on each other.
“We can say that after 1949, Chinese society was more conservative than in ancient China,” Peng said.
Things have changed following social and economic reforms that began in the late 1970s, but many Chinese still hold conservative views toward certain elements of sex, such as homosexuality and pornography. Pornographic Web sites and publications are banned, while young homosexuals often marry to conform to societal norms.
However, over the past decade, the subject has become an increasingly open topic for debate, mainly due to the proliferation of the Internet.
Many online communities, such as those for gays and lesbians and those seeking partner swaps, have sprung up over recent years, said Fang Gang (方剛), director of the sex and gender institute at Beijing Forestry University.
The country’s state-run broadcaster has aired a program featuring a controversial sexologist, who on the show called for the legalization of homosexual marriages, while an annual sex fair in Guangzhou in southeastern China drew 250,000 visitors last month.
Fang said sex is far more than a physical act.
“It is a barometer of the entire society. With a more free society comes a more free attitude towards sex and vice versa,” he added.
Lin said that about 70 percent of his clients, mostly in their 20s and early 30s, were male. Most purchase items — the favorite being a double vibrator — for their girlfriends.
At Yamete Love Store in a residential area of downtown Shanghai, customers can browse items ranging from inflatable dolls to sexy costumes amid low-key lighting as mellow music plays. Most of the items are imported from Japan and Sweden, and carry prices from between US$100 and US$210.
However, most shoppers still seem to prefer buying online.
“I feel too embarrassed to buy any sex toys in actual stores,” said Candice Zheng, a 25-year-old office worker in Zhejiang Province, south of Shanghai. “I just order them from online shops.”
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