Chicago – April 15, 2025
The classic 19th-century folktale The Emperor’s New Clothes is getting a contemporary reinterpretation as Chinese manufacturers shed light on a long-standing suspicion: luxury fashion doesn’t always mean high quality. Instead, many of these expensive items are marketed more as symbols of wealth and social prestige than craftsmanship or value.
In the original tale, a vain emperor is duped by two tricksters who claim to weave invisible garments that only the wise can see. In a similar fashion today, Chinese manufacturers and social media influencers are lifting the veil on luxury fashion, revealing that many prestigious brands actually produce their items in low-cost Chinese factories. These goods are then shipped to Europe, rebranded with high-end labels, and sold at exorbitant prices.
For years, “Made in China” has been synonymous with low-cost, mass-produced items, often created in substandard working conditions. Fast fashion has thrived on these conditions, but the revelation that even elite luxury labels follow similar production methods is damaging the carefully maintained image of exclusivity and superior quality that these brands rely on.
A viral clip of a Chinese consulting CEO lists more than 30 luxury brands—including Ralph Lauren, Armani, Nike, Dior, and Prada—that are produced in China. He claims their production costs are often just one-tenth of the final retail price. On TikTok, one user questioned how a handbag costing $30 to make could retail for $500. Some Chinese manufacturers are even sharing behind-the-scenes videos from their factories, urging consumers to skip the markup and buy directly from them.
One supplier involved in making Birkin bags shared that a model retailing for $34,000 costs as little as $1,400 to manufacture, with workers receiving only a small portion of the profits. Meanwhile, luxury brands maintain enormous margins.
Outside China, TikTok users have rallied behind this movement, praising the transparency and questioning the authenticity of Western luxury branding. One influencer remarked that luxury fashion has long served as a form of Western soft power, making countries like the U.S. more appealing by portraying their goods as the pinnacle of quality and taste.
But with evidence showing that up to 80% of luxury products from brands like Gucci, Fendi, Chanel, Hermès, and others are made in China—then falsely labeled as Italian or French—the illusion is breaking. Much like The Wizard of Oz moment when the man behind the curtain is revealed, consumers are beginning to see the reality behind the luxury facade.
This wave of exposure gained traction after U.S. President Donald Trump introduced his “Liberation Day” policy, which raised tariffs on imports. Starting with a 10% tariff on Chinese goods in February 2025, the rate jumped to 20% in March, and then climbed further to 54% by April with a retaliatory 34% hike, intensifying the economic standoff. Despite the rising tariffs, China’s confidence remains: “the sky won’t fall.”