Cleveland 6/11/2009 12:29:33 AM
News / Business

Global Demand for Labels will Reach 49 Billion Square Meters

World demand for labels is projected to expand 4.3 percent per year through 2013 to 49 billion square meters.  Value demand is expected to grow 5.3 percent per year to $105 billion.  The pressure sensitive segment (which overtook the wet glue segment in importance at the global level in the late 1990s) will continue to see above-average gains, accounting for almost 55 percent of global label demand by 2013.  In contrast, wet glued products will not fare as well, with demand even declining in many developed food and beverage markets where plastic containers continue to replace traditional steel cans and glass bottles and jars that utilize wet glued products.  Other less significant technologies with favorable outlooks include shrink sleeve, wrap-around film and in-mold labels.  Through 2013, plastic labels will continue to register much faster gains than paper labels, which are largely used in wet glued applications. These and other trends, including market share and product segmentation, are presented in World Labels, a new study from The Freedonia Group, Inc., a Cleveland-based industry research firm.

 

The Asia/Pacific region will expand its share of the world label market from 32 percent in 2008 to 36 percent in 2013China and India will account for much of this increase, while Japan will see weak growth.  The US will see below-average gains through 2013, but remain strong relative to other developed markets.  Western Europe will see a noticeable deceleration in its label market growth, with some highly intensive (relative to population) users of labels in the region such as Ireland, Scandinavia and the United Kingdom expected to see outright declines.  Latin America, Eastern Europe and the Africa/Mideast region, which combined accounted for less than 20 percent of global label demand in 2008, will all see above-average gains through 2013.

 

Among the various market segments, the smaller pharmaceutical sector will register particularly strong gains, aided by improving health care in the developing world and an aging population in the developed world.  The food and beverage sectors will see weaker gains as a result of market maturity and stagnant population growth in the developed world, combined with the increasing penetration of cans, pouches and other packaging media that utilize printed product descriptions rather than labels.  Label products with strong growth will include counterfeit deterrence labels, retail sector radio frequency identification tags (RFIDs) that allow labels to assume inventory control and management as well as convey information, and tamper-evident labels. 

 

The Freedonia Group is a leading international business research company, founded in 1985, that publishes more than 100 industry research studies annually. This industry analysis provides an unbiased outlook and a reliable assessment of an industry and includes product segmentation and demand forecasts, industry trends, demand history, threats and opportunities, competitive strategies, market share determinations and company profiles.