Hot drinks is one of the key areas in India to benefit from the new Goods and Services Tax (GST). The introduction of GST has led to a fall in the overall tax levied on key hot beverages such as tea and coffee. This, coupled with ease of transportation, is helping companies to expand within India. As coffee and tea is grown in various regions, a single tax across India will benefit the market due to making both business and taxation simpler. GST is also expected to help the consumer as companies...
Euromonitor International’s Hot Drinks in India report offers a comprehensive guide to the size and shape of the market at a national level. It provides the latest retail sales data 2013-2017, allowing you to identify the sectors driving growth. It identifies the leading companies, the leading brands and offers strategic analysis of key factors influencing the market - be they legislative, distribution or pricing issues. Forecasts to 2022 illustrate how the market is set to change.
Product coverage: Coffee, Other Hot Drinks, Tea.
Data coverage: market sizes (historic and forecasts), company shares, brand shares and distribution data.
Why buy this report? * Get a detailed picture of the Hot Drinks market; * Pinpoint growth sectors and identify factors driving change; * Understand the competitive environment, the market’s major players and leading brands; * Use five-year forecasts to assess how the market is predicted to develop.
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35 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Jan 2021
Foodservice outlets throughout Georgia were forced to close for almost half of 2020, as a measure against the spread of COVID-19. This caused severe declines in on-trade sales volumes of coffee, tea and other hot drinks.
Hot Drinks in Georgia report offers a comprehensive guide to the size and shape of the market at a national level....
36 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Jan 2021
During 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to mandatory closures of foodservice venues for long periods of time, followed by restricted re-openings. Though many locations offered delivery or takeaway, cafés and other venues that serve hot drinks did not particularly benefit from this, as hot drinks are not typically bought in foodservice to then...
35 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Feb 2021
Before COVID-19 struck, Egypt had been starting to recover from the severe devaluation of the Egyptian pound in late 2017 which led to steep inflation and inflation was lower in 2020, which has protected demand for hot drinks.
Hot Drinks in Egypt report offers a comprehensive guide to the size and shape of the market at a national...
38 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Jan 2021
Many Nigerian businesses were negatively impacted by the lockdown in the first half of the year to control the spread of COVID-19, leading to job losses, some permanent closures, disruption to supply chains and weaker consumer spending. The local currency suffered depreciation and manufacturers who depend on imports were put under intense...
39 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Jan 2021
In 2020, hot drinks in Saudi Arabia registered strong growth in off-trade volume and value terms; however, total volume and value sales of coffee and tea declined slightly as the Saudi government mandated the closure of cafés and restaurants in the early half of the year to try to restrict the spread of the COVID-19 virus.
Hot Drinks...
37 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Dec 2020
The Azerbaijani government moved to shorten foodservice opening hours on 22 March, before closing all foodservice outlets altogether on 29 March. Some outlets were permitted to reopen on 4 May, but these did not include those in the country’s biggest cities, Baku, Ganja, Sumgayit and Lankaran, where the rates of COVID-19 infection were still...
35 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Dec 2020
On 13 March the first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Guatemala and as early as 17 March 2020 the Guatemalan government took several measures to close the country in order to stop the spread of the virus. In the first weeks this resulted in high- and mid-income consumers stockpiling in order to avoid unnecessary trips to the supermarket.
Hot...
39 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Dec 2020
Tea, coffee, and other hot drinks are universally consumed products in India, and as a result retail sales were to some extent insulated from the impact of the pandemic. The end of the first quarter and the entire second quarter of the calendar year saw consumers stockpiling these products, as they wanted to make fewer trips to grocery stores...
40 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Dec 2020
The outbreak of COVID-19 in Turkey, led to the government implementing strict regulations from 21 March 2020, when a curfew was put in place, non-essential retailers were closed, and on-trade establishments, including cafés, restaurants, and cinemas, shut their doors. On-trade closures is set to result in a high volume decline in foodservice...
44 pages •
By Euromonitor International
• Dec 2020
All categories of hot drinks, especially other hot drinks, saw an increase in retail demand in the early half of 2020, as consumers stockpiled goods such as coffee and tea during the COVID-19 pandemic. These products benefitted not only from stockpiling, but from consumers spending more time at home during lockdown.
Hot Drinks in...
Retail
Beverage
World
Retail Revenue
Coffee Sales
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