The $10 Trillion Prize
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Meet your new global consumerYou’ve heard of the burgeoning consumer markets in China and India that are driving the world economy. But do you know enough about these new consumers to convert them into customers?Do you know that:• There will be nearly one billion middle-class consumers in China and India within the next ten years?• More than 135 million Chinese and Indians will graduate from college in this timeframe, compared to just 30 million in the United States?• By 2020, 68 percent of Chinese households and 57 percent of Indian households will be in the middle and upper classes?• The number of billionaires in China has grown from 1 to 115 in the past decade alone?In The $10 Trillion Prize, bestselling author Michael J. Silverstein and his The Boston Consulting Group colleagues in China and India provide the first comprehensive profile of the emerging middle class, primed to transform the global marketplace. Already the world’s biggest buyers of cars, mobile phones, appliances, and more, these consumers are eager for more products and services. In fact, it’s estimated that by 2020, consumers in China and India will generate about $10 trillion of total annual revenue for companies selling to them.This book explains who these consumers are—what they buy and why, how they think and shop, and how their needs and tastes are changing. It takes you into their lives so you can better understand what they want and what they’re looking for.Only by fully comprehending the forces driving this new generation of consumers will your company be able to capitalize on the opportunities their buying power represents. Insightful and backed by rigorous research, this book takes you inside the hearts and minds of today’s emerging Chinese and Indian consumers—both urban and rural, and across all income levels—positioning your company to win as the next wave of global affluence reaches the marketplace.
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ADVANCE PRAISE FOR THE $10 TRILLION PRIZE
“The authors have combined a deep understanding of India and China with sharp insights to create a book that is a must-read for anyone operating in these countries. It reflects the rapid changes occurring and how critical it is to keep in step.”
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His clients are the local businesspeople and tradesmen who pass by his stall. Primarily, he serves a regular set of customers, people who enjoy his trademark khasta puri, bada, and dahi bade (popular Indian fried snacks). As you go into his restaurant, the smell of onion, garlic, cumin, turmeric, lemon, curry, coriander, and coconut—among other distinct aromas—rushes at you. He makes all of his food fresh from locally sourced ingredients. The only exception is his Pepsi cooler.
Rakesh has prospered as Lucknow and Uttar Pradesh have prospered. In recent years, the state and its capital have enjoyed a significant measure of government investment in roads, buildings, and infrastructure. They still lag behind the rest of the country in education and health care, but things have improved over the last decade. The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, enacted in 2005, has brought a minimum living standard to many people. The program guarantees jobs with a daily wage of about $2.60. In 2010, the government spent $8.1 billion on the program.5 Some of that money goes to Rakesh in the form of snack purchases by the poor workers in Lucknow.
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