Will China’s luxury labels ever rival French luxury brands ?

Global luxury brands like Louis VuittonDior, are racing to grab a chunk of the Chinese market — and with good reason, considering the country is home to the third-largest population of millionaires and has become the second-largest consumer of luxury goods in the world. Meanwhile, however, hardly any of the luxury Chinese labels that showed have as strong a global brand recognition as their French counterparts. But that may change.

Angelica Cheung, editor-in-chief of China Vogue thinks it will happen, but not any time soon. “I feel that when everything else is ready — when people and the market are more mature, and people have more of an understanding of brands’ identity and individual style, and also the production side of the whole industry — basically, it takes maturity of the whole chain before that happens,” Cheung told website ARTINFO.

Only a decade ago, the term “Made in China” carried a negative connotation, often associated with cheap, poorly made goods. With more luxury goods being produced in the country, the meaning of that phrase is changing.

“A few years ago, people would hesitate before they used that expression,” said Cheung. “In Vogue China, we’ve had a column called ‘Made in China’ for the past five or six years. But it really means creativity out of China — what people were doing, what people created that was unique and interesting. These past few years, you just see a tremendous growth of young, homegrown talents. Every year the picture looks more promising and different.”

Many European high-end brands like Prada are replacing the “Made in Italy” label with “Made in China,” signaling a higher standard of quality (at a cheaper price) coming out of Chinese factories. “They understand more how these brands work, and they appreciate quality better than before,” said Chung.

But that doesn’t mean the Chinese luxury industry doesn’t face obstacles. “Where Chinese companies are lacking is quality control and product and image design,” said Eggers. “So far, China has not been able to produce a brand with a broad international appeal.”

Cheung cites many factors that affect the potential global success of a Chinese luxury label. “All these European brands, they succeeded for a big mixture of many reasons, so it’s not just about having a talented designer. It’s not just about having very skilled craftsmen,” said Cheung. “It’s many factors — generations of culture, skills, understanding of brands, understanding of quality, understanding of who you are, communication skills, business concepts, everything — understanding of markets. They’re all part and parcel of what makes a brand successful.”

Even though China’s luxury brands have yet to gain the global prestige that Prada, Gucci, Dior, and countless other designer labels have earned, perhaps it’s only a matter of few decades before they will be just as coveted.

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