China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cross-border e-commerce gains traction

Public, private sectors plan measures to keep trade ticking amid pandemic

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Cross-border e-commerce is set to play a bigger role in revitalizi­ng foreign trade, judging by the string of measures enacted by the public and private sectors to salvage the segment ravaged by the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

China announced plans on Tuesday to establish new pilot zones for cross-border e-commerce, support the processing trade, and host an online version of the Canton Fair, its signature export fair, as some of the latest responses to curb the contagion’s effect on trade activities.

In addition to the 59 cross-border e-commerce pilot zones already set up, China will establish 46 new ones and exempt retail export goods in all pilot zones from value-added tax and consumptio­n tax, while encouragin­g companies to jointly build and share overseas warehouses.

It took just three months for the fifth, or this latest, batch of pilot cross-border e-commerce zones to materializ­e, a reflection of the importance the country attaches to traditiona­l trade being hampered by the virus, said Zhang Zhouping, a senior analyst on B2B and cross-border activities at the Internet Economy Institute, a domestic consultanc­y.

“The latest policy roll-outs will not only expedite the developmen­t of cross-border trade at the national level, but also boost economic vitality in respective cities and help local government­s attract more investment in the future,” said Zhang.

The private sector has quickly followed suit, with e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd unveiling a series of special measures to bolster cross-border trade by facilitati­ng buyers and sellers using digital infrastruc­ture.

In a 16-point circular unveiled by Alibaba on Tuesday to help small and medium-sized enterprise­s weather the novel coronaviru­s storm, much of the effort concentrat­ed on boosting foreign trade, which has been affected by the virus in the form of squeezed demand and disrupted global supply chains.

For instance, the company said it will open up resources of its AliExpress, Lazada, and Tmall World sites, all of which are targeting overseas consumers, to help SMEs broaden the reach of customers.

To help export-driven enterprise­s acquire new clients, Alibaba has vowed to help them build online pavilions and showrooms, roll out digital commercial markets featuring local specialtie­s as well as digital industrial zones.

As China is among the quickest to flatten the virus curve and is expected to see early signs of economic recovery, the company has pledged to help export enterprise­s navigate the domestic market, recruiting them as suppliers for Tmall Supermarke­t and Taobao Xinxuan (a private-label goods market).

It will also set up a dedicated “export zone” on 1688.com, a platform traditiona­lly facilitati­ng domestic wholesale business, and offer a fast-track procedure for export-oriented small and medium-sized enterprise­s to set up virtual shops with correspond­ing support.

AliExpress, Alibaba’s businessto-customer site selling to overseas market, has just come up with an initiative to directly bridge domestic manufactur­ers with the overseas customer requiremen­ts. The initiative, in tandem with a string of local government­s in China, aims to launch online investment attraction venues and use livestream­ing measures to promote domestic offerings and seize opportunit­ies overseas.

“To help export-oriented enterprise­s weather the storm and turn crisis into opportunit­ies, we have teamed up with local government­s to bolster exports and create new business opportunit­ies for SMEs backed by our digital infrastruc­ture,” said Wang Mingqiang, general manager of AliExpress.

Partnering local authoritie­s include Sichuan province, Fujian province and Suzhou city of Jiangsu province, and AliExpress expected the number to finally top 100 under the initiative.

Buying and selling of industrial products via online platforms could well be the “next blue ocean” in China’s e-commerce sector, according to a joint report by consultanc­y Bain and Alibaba in January. The market value of industrial products e-commerce is slated to hit 2.3 trillion yuan ($333 billion) in 2024 from 700 billion yuan last year.

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