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Sales Of Instant Noodles Declining Fast In China - Food - Nairaland

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Sales Of Instant Noodles Declining Fast In China by Nobody: 9:36am On Dec 22, 2017
BEIJING – With their tangy sauces and sachets of dried meat and vegetables, instant noodles were once the bedrock of China’s convenience food, but their sales had declined drastically in recent years, reported Xinhua news agency.

For Geng Mei, an English teacher in Beijing, munching bowls full of steaming instant noodles was a highlight of her childhood.

“Cheap and delicious, instant noodles were so popular when I was a child,” says Geng, who is in her thirties. “But now I cannot even remember the last time I had them,” she told Xinhua.

INSTANT NOODLES WERE INVENTED IN JAPAN IN THE 1950s, spreading quickly throughout Asia, Europe and the rest of the world. They flourished in China in the 1980s and 1990s, with noodle bowls and packets ubiquitous in snack shops and supermarkets.

In 2013, sales of instant noodles on the Chinese mainland surpassed more than 46.2 billion packets, according to the World Instant Noodles Association – that is 1,465 packets of instant noodles opened every second.

However, by 2016, sales had dropped to just 38.5 billion packets and instant noodle companies are feeling the pinch.

Tingyi, which makes and sells Master Kong instant noodles, had a revenue slump in its instant noodle business from US$4.3 billion (S$5.8 billion) in 2013 to US$3.2 billion in 2016. The company even had to sell its inoperative noodle and beverage factories in the city of Xi’an, northwest China, earlier this year.

Zhang Xin, associate professor with department of economics and finance at Tongji University, told Xinhua the shrinking migrant population has damaged the industry as they were one of the largest groups of instant noodle consumers.

China’s migrant population decreased for the first time in about 30 years in 2015. The economic rise of China’s interior regions is luring back migrant workers from coastal cities. Skills and capital acquired in cities also help migrant workers start their own businesses in their home town.

The explosive growth of China’s high-speed railway networks turns out to be unexpected enemy of the instant noodles industry.

“I ate instant noodles for breakfast, lunch and as a midnight snack during my 20-hour train trips in the past,” says Tang Mingsheng, who works in the eastern Chinese city of Fuzhou.

But since 2013, Tang’s journey home at Spring Festivals is on a high-speed train that takes just six hours. There is no need for midnight instant-noodle snacking.

“Trains were once an important market for instant noodles, but railway stations are ordering less and less instant noodles these days,” says Long Shuhai, an instant noodle distributor in Yunnan Province.

Instead, trains sell expensive Haagen-Dazs ice cream, imported fruits and lunch boxes, as the instant noodle market continues to dwindle.
The rise of food delivery has also played a role in the declining fortunes of the instant noodle industry. From her office, Geng can see dozens of delivery men crowding the streets below, hurrying from office to office to drop off meals.

“Food delivery gives consumers access to quick meals of more diversified tastes,” she told Xinhua.
Users of food delivery services reached 295 million by the end of June, a 41.6 per cent increase from the end of 2016, according to the China Internet Network Information Centre.

Food delivery services have even reached high-speed trains. In mid-July, 27 major railway stations across China launched a pilot on-demand food delivery service for high-speed trains passing through the stations.

“The decline of instant noodle sales shows a shift in China’s consumption patterns,” says Zhao Ping with the Academy of China Council for the Promotion of International Trade. “Consumers are more interested in quality of life than just filling their bellies these days.”

The instant noodle industry is trying to regain its lost glory through developing more flavours. It is also upgrading products in a bid a change people’s perception of instant noodles as a “low-end” product.

But unlike cooking a packet of instant noodle, that is something that will not happen in an instant.

Source: The Straits Times

WHAT IS NOODLES?
Noodles are a staple food in many cultures made from unleavened dough which is stretched, extruded, or rolled flat and cut into one of a variety of shapes. While long, thin strips may be the most common, many varieties of noodles are cut into waves, helices, tubes, strings, or shells, or folded over, or cut into other shapes. Noodles are usually cooked in boiling water, sometimes with cooking oil or salt added.
Instant noodles are dried or precooked noodles and are often sold with packets of flavoring including seasoning oil. -Wikipedia-

https://foodfieldng.tk/2017/12/21/sales-of-instant-noodles-declining-fast-in-china/

Re: Sales Of Instant Noodles Declining Fast In China by bigtt76(f): 10:12am On Dec 22, 2017
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