Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
A girls holds a basket at a supermarket at the Mennonite community of Buenos Aires in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua.


While their parents may have scrimped and saved to raise small armies of children on a single paycheck, growing numbers of high-earning Mexican couples are putting the department store before the baby carriage.

Couples with dual incomes but no kids, or "Dinks," are on the rise in Mexico, nearly doubling since 2005. They are buoying a growing high-end goods market, splashing out on everything from expensive lingerie to home decor.

Though just over a million in number, the couples are a gold mine for leading brands, and their spending habits are shoring up consumer demand as Mexico's economy cools.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
Customers at a Walmart store in Mexico City.

Sandra Rodarte, 27, an events producer who shops for Apple products and loves fine whiskies, drops at least 10,000 pesos ($780) a month on non-essentials like annual trips to the United States. She and her live-in boyfriend have no plans to raise a family, she explains while lunching at the exclusive marble-clad shopping mall, Antara, in downtown Mexico City.

"It's more fun, freer... as a person and as a couple," said Rodarte, who is conscious that being a Dink means going against the grain in a culture that values marriage and motherhood.

"Of course there are stigmas. Here in Mexico, women are supposed to leave their homes in white to get married as virgins."

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
Men from Papantla, a village in Veracruz, Mexico, perform the flying rope ritual.

Little data exists on how much Mexican Dinks spend, but a 2008 study by consulting firm De la Riva Group found that each couple shells out about 165,000 pesos ($12,900) per annum, largely on movies, restaurants and bars - or some 220 billion pesos ($17.17 billion) in total.

That infusion is helping to boost Mexico's luxury goods market, which is projected to expand 12 per cent this year, on par with growth over the last four years, according to Bain & Company, a consulting firm. By contrast, total retail sales grew 3.7 per cent last year.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
A hotel in Cancun, Mexico.

For luxury leather goods maker Coach, Dinks are a growing market, company president Ian Bickley said in an email. The firm, which set up shop in Mexico a decade ago, now boasts 26 locations, its biggest presence in Latin America, and plans to open a new store in the city of Queretaro this year.

Spending in Mexico on designer apparel, luxury accessories and fine wines hit $3.88 billion in 2012, up from $2.16 billion in 2004, according to Euromonitor, a sales tracking firm.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
A man rows a Trajinera (boat) along the Xochimilco canals in Mexico City.

"We see a definite uptick in interest from brands that just a couple of years ago we never imagined... would be calling us and saying, 'We're interested in Latin America and what can you tell us about Mexico?'" said Franco Calderon, president of Latin American Retail Connection, which helps consumer goods stores set up shop in the region.

His firm is working on plans with luxury lingerie brand Agent Provocateur to debut in Mexico through top-end department store chain Palacio de Hierro.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
A waiter carries drinks in La Polar Bar in Mexico City.

Dinks, a concept born in the 1980s, are still a small subset of Mexicans, making up a projected 3.4 per cent of households at the end of 2012. That compares with 4.5 per cent in regional peer Brazil, 14 per cent in the United States and 17.6 per cent in the United Kingdom.

But analysts see the number continuing to grow, thanks to powerful social changes. Mexican women, who once were far likelier to be looking after children than becoming lawyers, accountants or doctors, are now almost as well educated as men.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
Pleasure crafts leave patterns in the sea in the resort town of Acapulco, Mexico.

In 1960, only 0.5 per cent of women had a university degree. By 2010 the number had leapt to almost 16 per cent - just a fraction behind their male peers. Meanwhile, birth rates in Mexico have plunged to an estimated 2.2 babies per woman this year from 5.7 babies in 1976, according to the national statistics agency.

Unlike in Europe, where the birth rate is a low 1.6, Mexican Dinks typically postpone child bearing rather than avoid it altogether.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
Ice skaters on a rink in Mexico City's historic Zocalo Square.

Seven out of 10 Mexican Dinks in the De la Riva Group survey said they want to have children eventually. One of them is Tatiana Romero, a 27-year-old licensing compliance expert at software firm The Foundry.

She and her boyfriend spend about 10,000 to 11,000 pesos ($780 to $860) a month on non-essentials, including 2,000 pesos ($160) for a nice meal. Romero, who bought a Mexico City home with her partner this month, said she hopes to have kids by age 33, but for now, she is happy to enjoy "the acquisitive power, the ability to treat ourselves" that comes with two incomes and no children.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
Hot air balloons float above the Pyramid of the Sun of Teotihuacan outside Mexico City.

A fan of clothing brands from H&M and Zara to Tommy Hilfiger and Hugo Boss, Romero says having a family "is something I grew up with. You dream about getting married and having kids."

The combination of delayed parenthood and dual income has encouraged more expensive tastes. "You're talking about relatively young couples that have strong purchasing power because they work and have enough discretionary income that they can undoubtedly dedicate to decorating their homes," said Carlos Miranda, vice president of Grupo Axo, which this year brought home decor brand Crate & Barrel to Mexico from the United States.

Axo, which also operates cosmetics company Sephora and clothing label Emporio Armani, has already opened two Crate & Barrel stores in Mexico City, with plans for a third in the city of Puebla. To be sure, some see potential headwinds over Dinks' creditworthiness and financial optimism.

Click NEXT to read more...

Couples want to spend money on shopping, not kids!

August 09, 2013 14:24 IST
People walk at the Revolucion avenue in the border city of Tijuana, Mexico.

"They're spending more than they can afford," said Bain & Co Partner Claudia D'Arpizio, who describes the group as "Henrys," "High Earners, Not Rich Yet." The De la Riva study suggested that saving is not a big priority for Dinks. As a group, however, they earn more on average than all other types of households, according to a 2010 survey by the Mexican statistics office.

What is clear is that spending by the no-kids set is resilient. Sales at department stores Palacio de Hierro and Liverpool rose about 10 per cent in the first quarter from the year earlier, almost double revenue growth at supermarket chains Walmart de Mexico and Soriana over the same period.

"Clearly the soft patch has had a bigger impact on Mexico's upcoming middle class and not necessarily on the wealthier segments of the economy, which continue to consume," said Will Landers, an equity portfolio manager at BlackRock.

Source: REUTERS
© Copyright 2024 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.