Asia is set to surpass North America to become the world's largest e-commerce market this year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).
According to a report in Beijing by the EIU yesterday, an advisory company under the Economist magazine group, it is estimated that retail sales in Asia will grow by an average 4.6 per cent on a volume basis to USD 7.6 trillion, compared with 2.5 per cent in North America and 0.8 per cent in Europe in 2015.
Report editor Laurel West said the Asian consumer market was largely driven by the rising independence and economic power of Asia's women, and female consumers in Asia are showing an unprecedented enthusiasm for online shopping, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
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The two countries together account for about three billion people.
The EIU report is based on a survey of 5,500 women across major cities on the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao, as well as countries including India, Japan, Singapore and the Republic of Korea.
Among the survey respondents, 43 per cent were in managerial, executive or professional services jobs.
Nearly half of the women agreed or strongly agreed that they preferred online- to in-store shopping.
The proportion on the Chinese mainland was as much as 69 per cent. Sixty-three per cent of those polled browsed the Internet at least once a day for products and services, with nearly 30 per cent doing so twice or more per day.
When choosing an online retailer, price and quality were the main factors considered, followed by genuine products and convenience.