蜜臀av性久久久久|国产免费久久精品99|国产99久久久久久免费|成人精品一区二区三区在线|日韩精品一区二区av在线|国产亚洲欧美在线观看四区|色噜噜综合亚洲av中文无码|99久久久国产精品免费播放器

<cite id="ygcks"><center id="ygcks"></center></cite>
  • 
    
  • <rt id="ygcks"></rt>
    <cite id="ygcks"></cite>
  • <li id="ygcks"><source id="ygcks"></source></li> <button id="ygcks"></button>
  • <button id="ygcks"></button>
    <button id="ygcks"><input id="ygcks"></input></button>
    
    
    <abbr id="ygcks"><source id="ygcks"></source></abbr>
    
    
    
     
    
    

    Feature: China's growing middle class wants Mexican avocados

    Source: Xinhua| 2017-12-24 11:22:22|Editor: liuxin
    Video PlayerClose

    by Luis Rojas

    MEXICO CITY, Dec. 23 (Xinhua) -- From tequila to avocados, the state of Jalisco in west central Mexico is seeing its exports to China increase, thanks to the expanding Chinese middle class.

    Still, the export of avocado to China is currently somewhere between the thoughts of some local officials and a development blueprint.

    On Singles' Day this Nov. 11, consumers purchased nearly a million avocados via online sales site Tmall, part of e-commerce giant Alibaba.

    Such a scenario has led some local officials to believe that the avocado, the bright-green protein-rich fruit the Chinese consumers have proven fond of, will be another local export with notable potential for growth.

    Ignacio Gomez, a spokesman for Jalisco's Association of Export Avocado Producers, said he's confident that his state's produce will be available to Chinese consumers soon.

    Right now in Mexico, only Jalisco's neighboring state of Michoacan ships avocados to China.

    "It is a market that is responding very well, and the trend indicates that in a few years China will be a very, very important market for Mexican avocados," said Gomez.

    Jalisco currently exports 80,000 tons of avocado to countries in Europe, Central and South America, and the Middle East, as well as Canada, Japan etc.

    One of Mexico's breadbasket states, Jalisco first launched tequila exports to China five years ago. In June of this year, the state made its first shipment of cranberries to China, sending 420 cases.

    "We have to continue to strengthen the relationship with China, which is exceptional," Jalisco's secretary of rural development, Hector Padilla, told Xinhua.

    "It is a market that is moving forward, that is growing, that is diversifying, and that we are cultivating so that volumes keep increasing," said Padilla.

    Padilla noted that producers of Jalisco's other well-known fruits such as berries, mangoes and limes, also see China's market as a great booster of business.

    "The space (for growth) in China is huge. They have enormous purchasing power that is growing year by year. It's just a question of time" before the state exports to China take off, said Padilla.

    "We are barely in the initial stage of penetrating the Chinese market," the state official added.

    Mexico benefited from China's growing consumer demand in 2017, with its exports to the Asian giant increasing 28 percent, the highest rate among its trading partners, and far higher than the 9 percent growth in trade it saw with its neighbor to the north, the United States, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) said.

    Government statistics show trade exchanges between Mexico and China grew a whopping 185 percent from 2006 to 2016, rising from 26 billion U.S. dollars to 74 billion U.S. dollars.

    Over recent years, Mexico has also received more than 74 million dollars in foreign direct investment from China.

    Mexico's productive sector is looking to diversify its exports markets given the climate of uncertainty affecting the two-decade North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between Canada, the United States and Mexico, since U.S. President Donald Trump took office.

    China's Latin American purchases were the most dynamic in 2017, and centered on basic products that are seeing higher prices compared to previous years, according to economist Paolo Giordano, an IDB expert in trade and integration.

    Following four years of negative growth, Latin America saw a 13 percent increase in exports in 2017, driven in large part by increased demand from Chinese consumers, according to IDB.

    The region's small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are also looking to break into Asian markets, especially China, said Alejandro Salcedo, head of the Mexican chapter of the Latin American Association of Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Businesses (ALAMPYME).

    "There are basic products that they need in order to produce and we want to see whether it is viable to supply these types of products to establish a marketing scheme," said Salcedo.

    ALAMPYME, which gathers 300,000 SMBs from 13 Latin American countries, believes that China could serve as a gateway to Asia.

    TOP STORIES
    EDITOR’S CHOICE
    MOST VIEWED
    EXPLORE XINHUANET
    010020070750000000000000011100001368486671
    香港| 白水县| 翼城县| 北流市| 光泽县| 页游| 孙吴县| 澜沧| 社会| 山丹县| 济阳县| 汝城县| 泸水县| 九龙城区| 汝阳县| 巍山| 江油市| 新建县| 牡丹江市| 湾仔区| 马关县| 武定县| 连江县| 富平县| 乐山市| 旌德县| 刚察县| 浦东新区| 漳州市| 大同县| 沂源县| 舞阳县| 都匀市| 商丘市| 澎湖县| 蓝山县| 确山县| 福清市| 宣汉县| 望谟县| 武邑县|