The "lipstick effect" — the observation that small luxuries hold up during downturns — is well documented. Health and wellness shows the same pattern, often stronger. When people can't afford a holiday, they buy a collagen sachet.
The data supporting wellness as defensive
Across the 2020–2022 cycle, supplement and skincare categories outperformed nearly every other consumer segment in Southeast Asia. Reasons:
- Health anxiety persists in any economy. Recession or boom, ageing skin and slow digestion still bother people.
- Wellness is reframed as essential. A $40 bottle of collagen feels different from a $40 dinner out — even though it's the same money.
- Lower-cost alternatives don't exist for premium nutraceuticals. A cheap collagen powder doesn't behave like Vida Glow's marine peptides. There's no perfect substitute.
What this means for a part-time consultant
If you're considering a side income that needs to weather a slowdown, wellness has structural advantages over fashion, hospitality, or experiential categories. Customers who started a routine because of a specific health concern (joint pain, sleep, brain fog) tend to maintain it through tighter months because the alternative — losing the result — is worse than the cost.
The caveat
"Recession resistant" doesn't mean "recession proof." Sales cycles still slow. New customer acquisition gets harder when discretionary spend tightens. The right move during a slowdown is double down on existing customers, not chase new ones.
Frequently asked questions
Is wellness still growing or near saturation? The Asia-Pacific wellness market continues to grow at high single digits annually. Saturation is far away.
What categories within wellness are most defensive? Daily-use products with measurable outcomes (sleep, skin, digestion). One-off splurges are more cyclical.
How does NTX position for downturns? Member pricing + free shipping + monthly product education that justifies the spend in tight months.