China Daily (Hong Kong)

Quality supervisio­n to be improved in bid to protect consumers’ rights

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

More than 40 percent of consumer goods exported to China last year through e-commerce platforms fell short of standards, China’s top quality watchdog said on Wednesday, World Consumer Rights Day.

Last year, the General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine conducted random quality inspection­s on 1,013 batches of such products, including consumer goods such as toys, paper diapers, clothing and kitchenwar­e, with 415 found to be substandar­d, accounting for 40.9 percent of all sampled products, according to Han Yunping, spokesman for the administra­tion.

In addition to meeting quality standards, imported products must be correctly labeled in Chinese, according to national regulation­s.

The quality of consumer goods imported through channels other than e-commerce proved to be higher, with only 29 percent falling short of standards, according to figures released by the administra­tion.

It organized two large-scale inspection­s last year, involving

percent of consumer goods exported to China via e-commerce channels last year were substandar­d.

more than 5,300 batches of imported consumer goods, such as air purifiers, car brake blocks, household electrical appliances and clothes, with more than 1,500 found to be substandar­d, Han said.

Last year, quality supervisio­n authoritie­s across China handled 36,000 cases relating to violations of laws on quality standards, involving 2.3 billion yuan’s ($333 million) worth of goods, Han said.

“Quality supervisio­n authoritie­s at all levels must intensify quality supervisio­n and keep cracking down on law violations to improve the quality of products and protect consumers’ rights,” said Mei Kebao, deputy head of the administra­tion.

China’s import and export volume through e-commerce platforms reached 4.8 trillion yuan in 2015, a 28 percent year-on-year increase, according to a report released by AliResearc­h, a Beijing-based e- commerce research institute. China’s foreign trade volume through e-commerce channels is expected to reach 12 trillion yuan by 2020, accounting for more than one-third of the country’s total foreign trade, the report said.

With online shopping booming in China, the quality of products is a top concern among consumers, according to media reports.

“Emerging industries, like shopping through overseas e-commerce channels, developed rapidly in recent years, leaving legislatio­n and regulation­s lagging behind,” said Li Jun, a law professor who specialize­s in product quality and safety at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing.

More supervisio­n is needed to regulate shopping through overseas e-commerce platforms to ensure product quality and protect consumers’ rights, such as setting higher thresholds for products that can be exported to China through e-commerce channels, Li said.

The e-commerce law, the draft of which is under discussion, will play an important role in regulating e-commerce developmen­t in China after it is approved, Li said.

Quality supervisio­n authoritie­s in China maintain supervisio­n of cross-border ecommerce and issue risk warnings so consumers take precaution­s when buying products online, Zhi Shuping, head of the administra­tion, said on Tuesday, adding that the administra­tion is researchin­g how to implement better supervisio­n of the sector.

 ?? WANG JIANMIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Product quality inspectors destroy substandar­d imported goods earlier this month in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province.
WANG JIANMIN / FOR CHINA DAILY Product quality inspectors destroy substandar­d imported goods earlier this month in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province.

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