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A combination of six pictures shows a variety of mooncakes with different fillings being displayed for the camera at a hotel in Singapore September 13, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Sept. 24 -- Mooncakes, a traditional
delicacy gifted to families and friends during the Mid-Autumn Festival, have
become an important ingredient in maintaining business and work relations.
With the festival falling tomorrow, the reception
areas of almost every office building are overflowing with boxes of mooncakes.
The traditional festival has become a Chinese
Christmas of sorts, topping other occasions for giving or receiving gifts.
"We send presents to our clients during the
Mid-Autumn Festival, rather than the Spring Festival," said Elsa Wang, who works
for a public relations firm in Beijing. The company started budgeting months
earlier and has been delivering mooncakes as early as a month ago.
"It doesn't matter how much a package costs....
Mooncakes are the best way to say: Let us keep in touch."
Lin Jian, a guest writer on the Financial Times
Chinese website, wrote that the consumption of mooncakes has one simple purpose
- to maintain relationships.
"How many mooncakes one gets measures his intangible
value," Lin wrote in his column. "The more coupons you receive, the more respect
you have."
The market has reacted to the increasing demand with
expensive packages to lure high-end consumers. In Changchun, one vendor sells a
box for 1,800 yuan (240 U.S. dollars) with a golf club as a complimentary
accompaniment.
About 250,000 tons of mooncakes were produced last
year with revenue exceeding 11 billion yuan (1.42 billion dollars).
(Source: China Daily)