Chris Bowers says she bought a purple three-piece tailored suit for the equivalent of US$30 on her last trip across the Chinese border to Shenzhen. At home in Hong Kong, that might not cover the cost of a T-shirt.
"It's cheap in Shenzhen," said Bowers, who owns a lingerie exporting company and also sings in a rock band. "You pay probably only 10 percent of what you'd pay in Hong Kong."
Hong Kong residents crossed the border 16 million times last year in search of bargains ranging from fake Prada bags to custom-made curtains. The exodus underlines a Chinese cost advantage that is blunting the city's competitive edge, deepening a retail spending slump and delaying an economic rebound.
"All of our customers are from Hong Kong," said Dai Jie, who opened Big Shanghai Xing Gang Tailor shop in Lowu Commercial Center, next to the Shenzhen train station, in 1997.
Shenzhen was little more than a market town when China's then-leader Deng Xiaoping (
Retail sales in Shenzhen rose 11 percent last quarter from a year ago, state media reported. Sales fell 3.7 percent in the same period in Hong Kong, where the jobless rate is at a record, wages are falling and growth is stalled.
Economists say low cross-border prices are helping bring down costs in Hong Kong, which is still among the world's most expensive cities even after consumer prices have fallen about 10 percent in the past 3 1/2 years.
The disconnection won't be smoothed for at least three or four more years, said Tim Condon, chief economist at ING Barings.
"It's an important reason for Hong Kong deflation," he said.
Shenzhen's five-story Lowu mall is the first stop for many out-of-town shoppers. It's a far cry from the marble and fountains of Pacific Place and other luxury malls in Hong Kong.
Stalls overflow with knockoff Louis Vuitton, Prada and Gucci purses for US$6 or less. Stores offer tailoring, massages, dried Chinese herbs and cheap jade. Few shopkeepers speak English, all prefer Hong Kong dollars to Chinese yuan -- and bargaining is expected.
In Hong Kong, retailers can't afford to offer such deals, mostly because their rents are among the highest in the world.
"Hong Kong has a much higher cost structure in terms of the retail industry," said Anita Bagaman, executive director of the Hong Kong Retail Management Association. "In times of economic difficulties, people look to pricing first."
Shopping isn't the only attraction that Shenzhen holds for Hong Kong residents. Many also buy property there.
The number of Shenzhen properties sold to Hong Kong buyers rose 29 percent last year to 9,750 units worth US$1.1 billion, according to Centaline Property Agency. The average price in Shenzhen is about HK$509 per square foot, compared with HK$4,000 in Hong Kong, Vigers Hong Kong Ltd estimates.
Granted, Shenzhen's deals come at the price of convenience.
For Hong Kong shoppers, a 45-minute train ride to the border is the easy part. From there, it can take hours to clear immigration on weekends and holidays, when as many as half a million people cross the border in a day.
Tailors also require customers to return at least once for a fitting before pronouncing a suit or shirt finished. That can mean two or three visits -- each of them lasting at least a full day -- before it's done. Some Hong Kong residents never make it back to the shop to pick up their clothes.
Hong Kong shopkeepers also maintain that Shenzen's prices are low for good reason, so there's little chance it will dethrone the former British colony as one of Asia's prime shopping destinations, said Yu Pang Chun, chairman of the Hong Kong Retail Management Association.
"People are realizing the quality of the products in Shenzhen is not what they expected," he said. A three-year bout of deflation in Hong Kong also means the city is becoming more affordable, Yu said.
In the meantime, Bowers, the founder of Sisters of Sharon, a popular Hong Kong band, travels to Shenzhen twice a month for costumes to use when she performs with her new band, Thinking Out Loud. She snagged a red Tina Turner-style wig on her last trip for HK$150 (US$20) -- half the asking price.
RESILIENCE: Taiwan plays a key role in semiconductors, energy, information infrastructure and advanced manufacturing, AIT Director Raymond Greene said Taiwan’s continued investment in deterrence and resilience remains vital, especially in uncrewed systems and other emerging technologies, American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) Director Raymond Greene said yesterday. Greene made the remarks at the annual National Strategic Summit on Supply Chain Resilience held by the Research Institute for Democracy, Society and Emerging Technology (DSET), a government-backed think tank. As Taiwan last year became the US’ fourth-largest trading partner and supply chain security is becoming more important, cooperation in emerging technologies continues to deepen between the two countries, he said. The US is committed to accelerating innovation, building key infrastructure, strengthening cooperation
The National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology yesterday showcased its locally developed variants of the Vision 60 robotic patrol dog, which it plans to deploy on the nation’s outlying territories in the South China Sea. The variants were produced under the Joint Lab project — created by the institute and domestic companies — and assembled with domestically produced motors, lenses and artificial intelligence (AI) systems alongside licensed tech from the US, Missile and Rocket Systems Research Division deputy director Jen Kuo-kang (任國光) told the media event at a military base in Taipei’s Dazhi (大直) area. Taiwan has built up its strengths
RIGHT DIRECTION: Taiwan’s efforts to prevent forced labor include a proposal to ‘fully prohibit’ employers from withholding workers’ documents, an official said Taiwan is to establish a mechanism to restrict imports of goods linked to forced labor, the Executive Yuan said yesterday, after the US proposed imposing additional tariffs on Taiwanese goods over labor concerns. “The Ministry of Labor and the Ministry of Economic Affairs are to establish an interministerial review procedure,” Executive Yuan spokesperson Michelle Lee (李慧芝) said at a news briefing in Taipei. “The government is to use the Foreign Trade Act [貿易法] as the legal basis to restrict imports of goods produced with forced labor” and bring its supply chain governance more in line with international standards on human rights, resilience
NOT IMMEDIATE: Taiwan has a chance to appeal the proposed 10 percent tariff before it starts, while other countries face a 12.5 percent tariff from the trade office Taiwan is among 60 economies determined by the US to have failed to impose or enforce a ban on the importation of goods produced with forced labor, according to a notice released on Tuesday by the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR), which proposed imposing an additional 10 percent or more tariff on them. The USTR in a statement said that following an investigation, it had determined under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 that the failure of the 60 economies to impose and effectively enforce a prohibition on the importation of goods produced with forced labor is