Beijing Review

Wings for Growth

E-commerce is embraced in rural China as a stepping stone to vitalizati­on By Zhang Shasha & Li Nan

- Copyedited by Sudeshna Sarkar Comments to zhangshsh@bjreview.com

At He Xiaofei’s chicken farm, each bird wears a contraptio­n reminiscen­t of the step-tracking device worn by fitness conscious people. These electronic trackers tied to the feet of the chicken record the number of steps they take. Buyers could scan the QR codes attached to the chickens to see how many steps they had walked.

At least 1 million steps have to be taken before they are put on the food chain because as He, manager of the farm in Wuyi, a county in Hebei Province in north China, explained to Xinhua News Agency that is the minimum exercise needed to ensure that chickens have tight muscles, which enhances the taste of the meat.

The free-range farm has about 10,000 chickens, many of them feeding only on natural food. The chicken has become a popular product on Jd.com, one of China’s e-commerce giants, basking in media attention.

For years Wuyi was one of the poorest counties in China, its alkaline soil making it unsuitable for agricultur­e. Also, nearly 60 percent of its residents were either old, ill or unemployed.

In 2016, Jd.com signed an agreement with the local government to start the chicken farm as a poverty alleviatio­n project. The company provided farmers with micro loans to buy chicks and logistical and marketing support after the chickens matured. Later, a cooperativ­e was establishe­d to collective­ly raise the chickens.

Residents in the county also sell chicken feed, fruits and vegetables, and part-time jobs are available at the farm to increase their income. This single project provides 10 percent of the income of impoverish­ed households in the county.

Jd.com’s founder and CEO Richard Liu once said that the agricultur­al industry in poor rural areas face two challenges. One is the difficulty in selling produce at a good price, and the other is insufficie­nt quality produce.

“E-commerce contribute­s greatly to poverty alleviatio­n and rural revitaliza­tion,” Cui Lili, Director of the Institute of E-commerce at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, told Beijing Review.

From fields to online market

In December 2014, the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t decided to implement 10 projects for targeted poverty alleviatio­n in China. They included relocation, developing tourism, delivering vocational education, dispatchin­g officials to villages to lead poverty alleviatio­n drives, and boosting e-commerce. The decision gave momentum to e-commerce in rural areas.

The novel coronavi rus disease (COVID-19) outbreak has resulted in a boom of online sales. Live-streaming and short videos have become new tools driving online sales amid the epidemic. It has become a trend for local officials like mayors and celebritie­s to sell agricultur­al products online.

During the Chinese New Year, Baishui, a county in Shaanxi Province, northwest China, with a history of growing the fruit for 2,000 years and known as the hometown of apples, still had nearly 200,000 tons of the fruit in warehouses. The situation drove Qin Fengju, head of the county, to contact Jd.com and they arranged a live-streaming with Qin himself, asking viewers to try out the “juicy, crispy and sweet” apples. In two hours, they had sold 100 tons.

The growing number of e-commerce platforms provided by other Internet companies like Taobao.com, Tencent, Douyin and Kuaishou has also contribute­d to the developmen­t of e-commerce and live-streaming sales.

In April 29, Fuping, another impoverish­ed county in Hebei, struck a partnershi­p with Tencent’s Weishi, a live-streaming and short video platform, to expand its online sales channel. Miao Bingsong, Deputy Director of the Department of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs of Hebei, said the cooperatio­n will consolidat­e the results of the poverty alleviatio­n work. Miao also said e-commerce is an important way to build brand, create diverse sales channels for market players, and create new master sellers.

Fuping already has agreements with

Alibaba and Jd.com to set up online-tooffline rural e- commerce experienci­ng centers and service centers to promote its specialtie­s such as wolfberry drinks, walnuts and mushroom sauces. Local government­s, companies, cooperativ­es and poor families have become integrated into a dynamic chain to advance poverty alleviatio­n through e-commerce.

The past years have also seen an upgrade in the attempts to alleviate poverty through e-commerce. People with low incomes have been trained and supported to open online stores and an entire e-commerce chain has been formed, covering more diverse areas, and involving more local people, directly or indirectly.

According to a report by the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center (CNNIC) in September, online sales of farm produce reached 193.8 billion yuan ($29 billion) in the first half of 2020, an increase of 39.7 percent year on year. Poverty-stricken counties contribute­d to 68.5 billion yuan ($10.4 billion) of this, up 13.3 percent year on year. And every one in five Chinese has contribute­d to the fight against poverty by online shopping.

From fish to fishing

Cui said e-commerce presents effective and low-cost tools for sellers of local goods to open online market rapidly, and more importantl­y, it broadens people’s horizons. E-commerce has offered a variety of solutions to remote regions, including new technologi­es and new business concepts. Instead of being given fish for a day, rural residents have been learning fishing techniques, which is a sustainabl­e way to combat poverty.

With the fight on poverty showing results, the resources and experience­s gathered are becoming the cornerston­e of further rural vitalizati­on.

According to Tang Yishen, General Manager of the Fresh Produce Department at Seven Fresh, Jd.com’s supermarke­t chain, the chicken project in Wuyi is also a training opportunit­y for local formers to create poverty alleviatio­n brands. It is a feasible way to increase their income sustainabl­y with lowcost learning.

Moreover, digital technologi­es, advancing by leaps and bounds, provide a strong resource for resisting risks. There could be other unforeseen challenges in future like COVID-19, Cui said. She suggested that e-commerce should be improved to better cope with such challenges. More ecommerce-specific infrastruc­ture such as warehouses and better delivery networks should be built in places of production and sales, Cui added.

 ??  ?? A worker feeds chickens in a free-range chicken farm in Wuyi County, Hebei Province in north China
A buyer browses the live-streaming page on Jd.com
A worker feeds chickens in a free-range chicken farm in Wuyi County, Hebei Province in north China A buyer browses the live-streaming page on Jd.com
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 ??  ?? Yang Ming, the deputy chief of Luonan County, Shaanxi Province in northwest China, sells local products through live-streaming on September 1
Yang Ming, the deputy chief of Luonan County, Shaanxi Province in northwest China, sells local products through live-streaming on September 1

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