
Where do fake luxury goods come from? Who produces them? Which countries do they go through on their way to market? A report published Thursday by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) seen by EL PAÍS shows that China is the main source of knock-off and pirated products sold around the world, while Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates and Singapore are distribution points. The report also highlights the growing importance of e-commerce in the sale of these fake designer goods.
The report follows up on another study produced last year by both organizations which looked at the economic impact of fake luxury goods. That research, based on data from customs seizures around the world, concluded that the business was worth €413 billion in 2013, equivalent to 2.5% of total global commerce. In the case of the EU, that figure rises to 5%. China and Hong Kong were identified as the origin of 80% of goods seized by the authorities.
In their latest report, the OECD and EUIPO have selected a range of the most-commonly copied goods, divided into 10 categories, representing 63% of the total fake market: food, pharmaceuticals, perfumes and cosmetics, leather goods and bags, clothing and textiles, shoes, jewelry, electronic and electrical goods, optical and photographic devices, and toys.

Based on an assessment of the industrial capacity of “countries of origin,” China emerges as the main producer of nine out of 10 of the fake goods categories, with India leading the field in pharmaceuticals, most of which go to Africa, while the developed world is the destination for electronic goods.
Turkey is identified as among the leading players in the production of fake goods, particularly leather articles, foodstuffs, and cosmetics, which are distributed by road throughout the EU.
A glance at the map accompanying this article provides a general idea of the movement of fake goods. Most are produced in China, India, and Thailand and head west via Hong Kong, Macao, and Singapore, as well as through ports in Ukraine and Albania or Morocco and Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. Panama is an important distribution point for the United States.
China and Hong Kong were identified as the origin of 80% of fake luxury goods seized by the authorities.
Vendors are increasingly turning to mail and courier services to get their fake luxury goods to market, notes the report: 62% of seizures between 2011 and 2013 had been sent through the mail. Hong Kong, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates were identified as transit points where fake goods are repackaged from containers. Sending parcels through the post reflects “the growing importance of the internet and e-commerce in international trade,” notes the report.