Rich kids' driving ambition

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Members of the Beijing Supercar Club (SCC) pose with their cars |
'Targeted' supercar owners steer toward charity to dispel bad image
It was 10 pm on a frosty winter night and Zhang Kuan was sitting with his friends around a street-side barbeque stand. Just visible through the smoke behind them stood a bright green Lamborghini and a shiny black Ferrari. "Don't think people who drive supercars don't eat street food," smiles Zhang, owner of the Lamborghini, as he chews on an oily meat skewer.
As the group ate on the street outside Beijing's Poly Theater, several people stop to admire the cars, including two young women who pose for pictures with the chic machines.
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Top: Zhang Kuan (left), founder of the Beijing Supercar Club, parks at the 798 Art Zone in Beijing. Above: Lu Yi (center) and his friends from the club park up for a chat at the 798 Art Zone. |
Yet, not everyone is pleased, with one passerby grumbling under his breath about "rich kids showing off".
After a series of high-profile traffic incidents involving children of wealthy and powerful parents, netizens and the media have singled out drivers of expensive cars as an "evil" of China's rich-poor divide.
"They've become a symbolic target of public resentment," is how sociologist Zhao Weihua at Beijing University of Technology puts it.
However, 32-year-old pawnbroker Zhang Kuan warned that the ongoing vilification of supercar drivers is fueling the "victimization" of innocent enthusiasts nationwide. As the founder of the Beijing Supercar Club (SCC), he aims to change that.
Zhang has been infatuated with fast cars since he was a teenager but only realized his dream of owning one three years ago when he bought a Ferrari.
Driving the car out from the showroom "was like driving for the first time", he says. "The combination of freedom and control was like nothing else."
He remembers being the center of attention that day, with everyone in the street "throwing me a second glance". Many people still stare today, some in fascination, some in disgust.
"When people see a supercar now, instantly their first reaction is, 'Look at that rich kid and his mad driving'," says Lu Yi, 30, an SCC member and manager of a Beijing car dealership. "There's a definite prejudice against us, which the media is helping stir up."
Road rage
In fairness, wealthy young people in sports cars have handed journalists a fair amount of ammunition to attack them with in recent years.
In October this year, 22-year-old Li Yifan knocked down and killed a female student while drunk on Hebei University's campus. After attempting to speed away, he allegedly told onlookers in his way: "Sue me if you dare. My father is Li Gang (a deputy district police chief)."
The incidents came shortly after a "connected" college student in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi province, stabbed to death a young mother he injured with his car as he feared this "peasant woman would be hard to deal with".
Hu Bin was also sentenced to three years in jail in July 2009 for killing a pedestrian while drag racing his high-powered Mitsubishi on the streets of Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province. Pictures of Hu laughing with friends shortly after the accident were published on the Internet.
Following the negative publicity, SCC members from across China says their vehicles have been repeatedly scratched when parked on the street, causing thousands of yuan in damage.
People have every right to be angry with supercar owners, argues Tang Jun, secretary-general of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' social policy research center, who says he has seen many of them speeding on city roads.
"When (these drivers) don't obey traffic rules, they are a threat to public safety," he adds.
However, Zhang complains that the negative image is largely fueled by the media's portrayal of wealthy car owners.
"When there is a traffic accident involving a rich driver, the media is all over it and give the story repeated coverage," he says. "When we do charity work, they don't bother to report it at all."
To try and boost the reputation of his club, which was set up last year, Zhang has organized several charitable projects, including visiting orphanages and elderly care centers to help out and donate money.
In November, several members drove to an animal welfare center on the outskirts of Beijing. They donated food and money, as well as blogged about the day to raise awareness to the problem of stray cats and dogs.
"I thought all rich kids do is waste money and show off," reads a comment left by an anonymous netizen on the SCC's site, hosted by sina.com. "I'm touched by your social responsibility and hope your actions can inspire others."
Sociologist Zhao says she believes it will take a lot more to solve the "deeper conflict" behind the animosity toward luxurious or fast cars.
"In a society with such a serious unbalance in the distribution of wealth, the general public tends to generalize and label the rich group as bad" following high-profile examples, she explains.
"Wealth forces on them higher moral requirements and they need to be extra behaved to maintain a good public image."
Zhang agrees and says the SCC has strict rules against street racing and drunken driving. Making sure everyone sticks to them is easier said than done, however.
After a photo shoot at Beijing's 798 Art Zone last weekend, a Porsche and a Ferrari driven by two SCC members could clearly be seen racing on the airport expressway.
Checkered future?
In addition to convincing the world not all supercar owners are "spoiled rich kids", Zhang harbors another ambition: To promote a motorsport culture in China.
With car clubs offering fans a gateway into the world of racing, the SCC regularly stages track meets across the country.
Amateur motorsport in China is relatively immature compared to other countries, as most supercar owners just "want to look cool" outside nightclubs, according to Xing Lu, a 38-year-old advertising company boss who owns a Ferrari.
He adds: "It's hard to appreciate wine when you never had a cellar, so how do you expect (young people) to really understand sports cars when their parents never had one?"
Like Zhang, organizers at Scuderia Ferrari Club Shanghai, the only Ferrari club in China officially recognized by the Italian automakers, are trying to help develop an appreciation.
Founded in 2005, club members routinely visit Chinese university campuses to promote motorsport among students.
"We advocate motorsport culture, not the culture of wealth," says Zhu Yuhua, founder and chairman of Scuderia Ferrari Club Shanghai. "Motorsport represents the pursuit for dreams, sportsmanship and technology."
No matter how attractive the sport looks, however, Zhang at the SCC cannot remove the fact that fast cars are well beyond the reach of most people's budgets.
"High-end automobiles are sold at least two to three times more expensive in China than they are abroad because of high tax," says Ma Hongguang, a salesman at Beijing's Huaxiang Car Market, the largest second-hand luxury car showroom in North China.
It's a "rich person's game", he says. "Fashionable young buyers always go for the latest model. Money is not an issue for them."
Between them, SCC members own roughly 300 supercars, including limited-edition models made by Maserati, Aston Martin, Pagani and Tramontana. The value of these cars can range from 1.4 million yuan to 30 million yuan (159,000 euros to 3.4 million euros).
And owning a supercar is just the start; there is also fuel and racing costs. According to Goldenport International Circuit in Beijing, drivers need to pay between 1,000 and 10,000 yuan per visit.
To hone his driving skills on the track, Xing paid 300,000 yuan in March to complete the nine-day Pilota Ferrari training program in Beijing and Shanghai.
He says that, apart from "a few old men" from Japan, most of his classmates were Chinese aged 20 to 30 "from rich families".
China is expected to surpass Japan to become the world's largest luxury goods market in the next five years, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' 2010 Business Blue Book.
One of the sectors constantly expanding is supercars. The number of Ferrari cars delivered to the Chinese mainland alone has trebled since 2005.
"China is a very important market for Ferrari," Edwin Fenech, president and chief executive of Ferrari Asia-Pacific tells China Daily. "It is offering the highest growth potential for our business."
Fenech points out, however, that the average age of the automakers Chinese customers is 10 to 15 years younger than those in maturer markets.
"Most of my clients are children of rich parents involved in investment, real estate or energy businesses," says Zhou Juan, a Ferrari sales executive in Beijing. "Chinese parents always give the best to their children."
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