Southeast Asia’s fast-moving consumer landscape is in the middle of a major reset, as consumers juggle affordability pressures with rising expectations for quality, digital convenience, and local relevance.
A new report from Bain & Company and NielsenIQ (NIQ) reveals that, while the growth potential is immense, competition and complexity are also rising at a rapid pace. A $5 Trillion Consumption Opportunity The report highlights that private consumption across the “SEA-6” markets—Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam—is projected to grow about 8% annually to nearly $5 trillion by 2035 , potentially overtaking North America.
This trajectory is powered by rising incomes and rapid urbanization, with Vietnam and Thailand each expected to see their urbanization rates increase by 7% over the next decade. At the same time, consumer sentiment has softened in recent quarters as inflation and macro uncertainty weigh on household budgets, slowing FMCG category growth.
This tension between long-term upside and short-term caution defines much of the current retail and FMCG reality in the region. Polarized Spending And The “Better For Me” Shift One of the clearest shifts is polarization in how people spend.
Consumers are trading down in some everyday categories, while willing to trade up in what the report calls “good for me/my family” segments, such as Beauty and Baby . This creates a barbell market where value-focused essentials coexist with premium, benefit-led products in the same basket…