Ingo R. Titze Research & Consulting

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German consumers hardly impressed by looming economic downturn

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Feb 17, 2009: German consumers hardly impressed by looming economic downturn

According to a representative survey by hi-tech association BITKOM, two thirds of German consumers said they were going to buy consumer electronics products in 2009. Demand will be particularly high for computer accessories (storage cards, PC mice, printers and webcams). Despite a mostly saturated market, 19 percent of all Germans intend to buy a mobile phone in the near future. This is followed by flat screen TV sets (18 percent), computers / laptops and games software (17 percent each). 16 percent plan to purchase digital cameras, while 12 percent would opt for new MP3 players. Especially younger consumers (14 to 29 years) intend to own new electronics items: 90 percent in this age group will at least buy one new product. Favourites are mobile phones, computer accessories and games software. The elderly (60+) prefer flat screen TVs, PC accessories and digital cameras.

Meanwhile, industry association BIU announced that sales of computer games rose by 14 percent to € 1.57 bn in 2008, of which software run on game pads represented € 744 mn. Traditional PC systems, however, lost 7 percent of sales, down to € 438 mn. Sales for mobile devices climbed 6.7 percent to € 384 mn.


 
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Ingo R. Titze Research & Consulting is a member of the British Chamber of Commerce in Germany.


 

July 5, 2010: German market for consumer electronics to remain robust

Compared to the EU average, the German market for consumer electronics is expected to be fairly robust this year. According to estimates by industry association Bitkom, it might only see a small sales decrease by 0.4 per cent to 12.3 billion euro. Meanwhile, the overall EU market might decline by as much as 8.3 per cent to 54.1 billion euro. Particularly flat screen TVs are selling very well in Germany this year, with an expected rise by 2.9 per cent to 6.1 billion euro. Likewise, digital set-top-devices and BluRay players will see increasing sales. Germany is the largest country market for consumer electronics in the EU.


 

May 19, 2010: 60 percent of Germans shop online

A recent survey by Forsa/Bitkom found that six out of ten German consumers (at least 14 years of age) shopped on the internet last year. This is a growth of 10 percentage points compared to the previous year. Online payment systems such as PayPal, T-Pay, or Click-and-Buy play a significant role in this development. 17 percent of the German population have at least used one of those systems, up 6 percentage points compared to 2008. Most popular are those systems in the age group between 30 and 40 years. 29 per cent of the population in this age segment are registered with at least one of the payment systems. However, traditional paper invoices are still most popular across all age groups, followed by advance payment, debit, and COD. The use of credit cards is least popular.


 

April 20, 2010: Beer consumption in Germany remains high

Last year, total consumption of beer and beer-mixed beverages amounted to 86.1 million hectolitres (not including non-alcoholic and malt beer). This corresponds to a per-capita consumption of 121.4 litres of all persons who are at least 15 years old. Thus, every potential beer consumer on average drinks one bottle of beer (0.33 litres) per day.


 

March 25, 2010: 2.9 million Germans to buy e-books this year

According to a survey conducted for industry association Bitkom, 2.9 million German consumers are planning to buy an e-book this year. This represents a year-on-year growth rate of 32 per cent. It is expected that e-books will first become popular in the professional field since its search functions are considered to be of great value for this target group. However, every tenth young German (between 14 to 24 years of age) is said to purchase an e-book in 2010.