According to a recent study published by Fact.MR, the growing up milk market will envisage an impressive 5.9% volume y-o-y growth in 2018 over 2017. The study reveals that the growing needs of the ‘new-age’ parents to find a convenient way of meeting nutritional requirements of their toddlers is mainly providing a fillip to the growth of the growing up milk market. The study also finds new avenues of growth for growing up milk manufacturers in developing countries in the Asia Pacific and the Middle East & African region.
Ask for sample link here: https://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=S&rep_id=2375
Some of the key findings of the Fact.MR market study include
A significant rise in discretionary income of consumers has facilitated a larger consumer base to access ready-to-serve toddler nutrition products, such as growing up milk products.
Increasing number of nuclear families and working parents remain the key contributors to the recent developments in growing up milk market.
Breastfeeding rates have gone up in many developed countries, which is likely to reflect in declining sales of growing up milk products in developed regions, such as Europe and North America.
The World Health Organization does not recommend growing up milk products, calling follow-up formulae “unnecessary” and “unsuitable” for toddler growth. This is restricting the sales, hampering growth of the growing up milk market.
Marketing and branding strategies manufacturers in the growing up milk market of labeling growing up milk products as ‘toddler milk’ are convincing parents that growing up milk can help them to transition from breastfeeding to adult food.
Read Detailed Index of full Research Study at https://www.factmr.com/report/2375/growing-up-milk-market
The Fact.MR study analyzes prominent parenting trends in various geographical regions to identify growth prospects of growing up milk market in various regions. It finds that the demand for growing up milk products is relatively higher in developing countries than that in developed countries.
Asia-Pacific and MEA Markets Hold a Revenue Share of around 60% in Growing Up Milk Market
The study reveals that Asia-Pacific and the Middle East & Africa are the most lucrative regional markets for growing up milk, and the trend is likely to continue to remain preeminent in the upcoming years. According to Fact.MR, high fertility rates and low mortality rates in developing countries create a positive environment for growth of growing up milk market in these regions.
The fertility rate in the Asia-Pacific has been relatively higher in the past few years. After the Chinese government dropped the one-child policy, the birth rate in China has increased back up again by 7.9% to reach 17.86 million during 2014-2015, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC). Consumers are becoming more aware of the importance of child nutrition, which in combination with rising birth rate is creating a higher growth potential for growing up milk market players in the region.
Over 5.4 million children aged 0-5 years succumbed to death in 2017, and the risks of children dying are highest in the African region, according to the World Health Organization. Reducing preventable deaths of infants and toddlers in this region is one of the Sustainable Development Goals set by the United Nations General Assembly, which may provide an impetus to the adoption of nutritional supplement products such as growing up milk in the MEA region.
Request for the Customization of the report: https://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=RC&rep_id=2375
About Us
We are an insights-driven global market intelligence company with a unique purpose: enabling organizations make better decisions. We do this by creating an ecosystem where an eclectic cognitive collaboration between human imagination and data science leads to path breaking ideas.
Our vision is to foster a pervasive culture where critical business decisions are taken on the basis of facts rather than assumptions and perceptions.
Our mission is empowerment – empowerment of free-thought; empowerment of fact-based decisions; empowerment of decisive action.
For More Information Kindly Contact:
Suite 9884
27 Upper Pembroke Street,
Dublin 2, Ireland
Tel: +353-1-4434-232
Mail: sales@factmr.com
Read Blog: https://thetribunecity.com/
Ask for sample link here: https://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=S&rep_id=2375
Some of the key findings of the Fact.MR market study include
A significant rise in discretionary income of consumers has facilitated a larger consumer base to access ready-to-serve toddler nutrition products, such as growing up milk products.
Increasing number of nuclear families and working parents remain the key contributors to the recent developments in growing up milk market.
Breastfeeding rates have gone up in many developed countries, which is likely to reflect in declining sales of growing up milk products in developed regions, such as Europe and North America.
The World Health Organization does not recommend growing up milk products, calling follow-up formulae “unnecessary” and “unsuitable” for toddler growth. This is restricting the sales, hampering growth of the growing up milk market.
Marketing and branding strategies manufacturers in the growing up milk market of labeling growing up milk products as ‘toddler milk’ are convincing parents that growing up milk can help them to transition from breastfeeding to adult food.
Read Detailed Index of full Research Study at https://www.factmr.com/report/2375/growing-up-milk-market
The Fact.MR study analyzes prominent parenting trends in various geographical regions to identify growth prospects of growing up milk market in various regions. It finds that the demand for growing up milk products is relatively higher in developing countries than that in developed countries.
Asia-Pacific and MEA Markets Hold a Revenue Share of around 60% in Growing Up Milk Market
The study reveals that Asia-Pacific and the Middle East & Africa are the most lucrative regional markets for growing up milk, and the trend is likely to continue to remain preeminent in the upcoming years. According to Fact.MR, high fertility rates and low mortality rates in developing countries create a positive environment for growth of growing up milk market in these regions.
The fertility rate in the Asia-Pacific has been relatively higher in the past few years. After the Chinese government dropped the one-child policy, the birth rate in China has increased back up again by 7.9% to reach 17.86 million during 2014-2015, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC). Consumers are becoming more aware of the importance of child nutrition, which in combination with rising birth rate is creating a higher growth potential for growing up milk market players in the region.
Over 5.4 million children aged 0-5 years succumbed to death in 2017, and the risks of children dying are highest in the African region, according to the World Health Organization. Reducing preventable deaths of infants and toddlers in this region is one of the Sustainable Development Goals set by the United Nations General Assembly, which may provide an impetus to the adoption of nutritional supplement products such as growing up milk in the MEA region.
Request for the Customization of the report: https://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=RC&rep_id=2375
About Us
We are an insights-driven global market intelligence company with a unique purpose: enabling organizations make better decisions. We do this by creating an ecosystem where an eclectic cognitive collaboration between human imagination and data science leads to path breaking ideas.
Our vision is to foster a pervasive culture where critical business decisions are taken on the basis of facts rather than assumptions and perceptions.
Our mission is empowerment – empowerment of free-thought; empowerment of fact-based decisions; empowerment of decisive action.
For More Information Kindly Contact:
Suite 9884
27 Upper Pembroke Street,
Dublin 2, Ireland
Tel: +353-1-4434-232
Mail: sales@factmr.com
Read Blog: https://thetribunecity.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment