Categories: Stories

Sales Plummet As Fewer Kids Are Buying And Riding Bicycles These Days

ADVERTISEMENT

Sales are saying it all that fewer adults are buying bicycles for their kids, so fewer kids are riding them these days. Riding a bicycle was often one of every kid’s favorite activities when the weather finally got nice and warm. People also can’t forget their first experience learning how to ride a bicycle in an open parking lot or their own driveway.

Market research shows that fewer kids are riding bikes, even as industry prices continue to rise for biking equipment. This is in large part due to the Trump administration’s tariffs on Chinese-made goods. The research also shows that the number of children ages 6 to 17 who rode bicycles regularly decreased by more than a million from 2014 to 2018. These sales include both leisure riding around the neighborhood and more competitive biking.

ADVERTISEMENT

Tariff prices + less interest = worry for bicycle industry insiders

Kid riding a bicycle / Wallpaperflare

From 2018 to 2019 alone, children’s bicycle sales decreased 7 percent in dollars and 7.5 percent in bikes sold. This is a drop serious enough to make retailers adjust their prices to make up for the lower demand. Additionally, kids are simply just less interested in bike-riding these days.

ADVERTISEMENT

RELATED: 30 Bikers Line Up At Girl’s Lemonade Stand After Mom Helps Injured Riders In Crash

The American bicycling industry is now being forced to prepare for things to get worse from here. As mentioned previously, the Trump administration has enforced a 25 percent tariff on Chinese-made goods. Because this so greatly affects every part of how bikes are made, CEOs of bike companies plan to testify on this and how it negatively impacts those companies. “CEOs of bike companies have and will testify in front of the U.S. Trade Representative about these tariffs: that bike prices will go up, and that means fewer kids will ride bikes,” says Tim Blumenthal, president of People for Bikes.

The market research shows a consistent drop through the years

Bikes in Walmart / Flickr

Blumenthal continues, “The consequences of kids riding bikes will go well beyond the number of kids who ride. In the mass market, tariffs, if they continue for a long time, are likely to have a big effect on the kids market.”

Arnold Kamler, chief executive of New Jersey bicycle company Kent International, also chimed in with his thoughts. He writes an opinion piece on this for the Washington Post. “The new tariff raised our overall costs by 7.5 percent, which we were forced to pass on . . . ultimately, to American consumers . . . When the holidays arrived, consumers were put off by the higher prices. Sales dropped, ending up 5 to 10 percent lower than our projections.”
Bicyclists chart / Sports & Fitness Industry Association

In conclusion, coupled with less interested kids and higher tariff prices, this could mean increase worries for industry insiders.

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

test

test

4 years ago

‘The Little Rascals’: The ‘Our Gang Curse’ That May Have Haunted the Cast Throughout the Years

Hollywood “curses” are a strange thing as people tend to look at the collective deaths…

4 years ago

Florida Man Pays Utility Bills For Over 100 Families For Second Christmas In A Row

74-year-old Michael Esmond is putting on the Santa Claus gear this year once again as…

4 years ago

Orlando PD Donates Christmas Gifts To More Than 200 Kids In Need

Police officers from Orlando, FL donated and delivered Christmas gifts to more than 200 kids…

4 years ago

The 1965 Kecksburg Incident: What Fell Over Pennsylvania?

On December 9, 1965, a blue-tinged fireball streaked across the sky over Kecksburg, Pennsylvania. However,…

4 years ago

Why The Pandemic Helped Bring Back Sunday Family Dinners

Over years, less emphasis ended up placed on traditional Sunday family dinners. In those times,…

4 years ago