China Daily (Hong Kong)

Quality inspectors step up search for substandar­d, fake goods on internet

- By ZHOU WENTING zhouwentin­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

More than 30 percent of goods sold over the internet in China were found to be substandar­d last year, three times the proportion of products sold offline, Zhi Shuping, head of the country’s top quality watchdog, said on Tuesday.

The General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine examined nearly 7,000 sample groups of goods sold online and more than 2,100 failed quality standards and were ordered to be removed from sale, Zhi said during a news conference on the sidelines of the annual two sessions.

In brick-and-mortar stores, more than 90 percent of goods have passed inspection for the past three years, he said.

One of the top priorities of the watchdog in recent years has been the quality of goods sold online, in part because such vendors often don’t have storefront­s and can be virtually anywhere. That circumstan­ce can be exploited by some merchants to sell fake or low-quality products.

It’s also because the number of online shoppers is surging, Zhi said. Their ranks had swelled to 374 million in mid-2015, according to the latest figures from the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center.

“Since last year, we’ve allowed seven major e-commerce players, including Alibaba’s Taobao and JD.com, to have access to our database of products that have obtained a China Compulsory Certificat­ion,” Zhi said. That allows them to check whether products required to have the certificat­ion before sale actually have it, he said.

Such products include home electrical appliances, home decoration materials, personal care products and kitchen appliances.

Taobao said they began a thorough screening in June,

The percentage of Chinese exports to Africa found to be substandar­d dropped substantia­lly, from 7.6 percent in 2014 to 3.2 percent last year. China has been working with 14 African countries for the past several years to fight exports of fake and poor quality goods. China also has trained over 1,000 personnel from African countries in quality supervisio­n, inspection and quarantine issues in recent decades.

Also, oversight of food imports and exports will be strengthen­ed to ensure food safety. Imports of over 2,000 kinds of food from 178 countries and regions are now permitted

starting with child safety seats for use in vehicles. “Hundreds of thousands of products without the compulsory certificat­ion were removed from our platform,” Alibaba said in a written statement.

In August, the screening expanded to all 34 product categories that need the certificat­ion.

“Nearly 200,000 products that hadn’t obtained certificat­ion were intercepte­d before entering our online market every day,” Alibaba said.

Taobao also forwarded informatio­n on those products and their sellers to the quality watchdog, officials said.

Jack Ma, Alibaba founder and chairman, suggested cracking down on the manufactur­ing and sale of fake products in the same way drunken driving is punished.

“I believe tremendous changes will be witnessed in intellectu­al property protection and food and drug safety in our country if those who sell a fake product are detained for seven days and those who manufactur­e such a product receive criminal punishment,” he wrote on his Sina Weibo account on March 7.

Zhi said the quality watchdog has also noticed that an increasing number of Chinese are buying from overseas merchants. The agency is mulling the best way to ensure the quality of those products, too.

“Currently, we treat them as articles for personal use and conduct tests only to detect harmful organisms and prevent epidemics,” Zhi said.

“If the market continues to grow, we may expand our reach into the cargo management area, which includes checking the qualificat­ions for market access and quality supervisio­n,” he said.

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