(1) Christina Larson, China's Skyrocketing (Pet) Population.
www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... ting-pet-population
Quote:
Dennis Schenk is “flown around the country by [Chinese] clients who pay him 500 yuan ($81) an hour to train their dogs to come and sit, and to treat them—the pets, not owners—for anxiety and aggression.
“Up until the 1980s, keeping pet dogs was illegal in Beijing, because pets were considered to be a bourgeois affectation. * * * (A height limit on dogs is still in place.) * * * China has become the third-largest pet market in the world, after the US and Brazil, according to Euromonitor International, and is home to 27 million dogs and 11 million cats.
“In 2012, Chinese pet owners spent 7.84 billion yuan on animal care.
Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print:
Canine psychologists, bejeweled leashes, and puppy photo shoots fly in the face of Maoist rhetoric
(b) “Silas Chen, 28, recently enrolled his 10-month-old Samoyed in a canine training program.”
Samoyed (dog)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samoyed_(dog)
(a breed of dog that takes its name from the Samoyedic peoples of Siberia)
(c) “Noble Pets, a boutique in Beijing’s upscale Sanlitun neighborhood * * * Store Manager CHEN Zhiyi”
(ii) Noble Pets 诺宝派(宠物)
www.noblepets.net
(隶属于 和生梦圆商贸(北京)有限公司旗下; 和生梦圆商贸(北京)有限公司成立于2012年)
(ii) 店长/高级美容师: 陈致屹
(2) Shhh ... Luxury Goods Are Discounted in China.
Note: summary underneath the title in print: As sales growth slows, exclusive brands quietly try price-cutting
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