China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tianjin e-commerce firms spend $216m on poverty alleviatio­n

- By JING SHUIYU in Beijing, YANG CHENG and SONG LINLIN in Tianjin Contact the writers at yangcheng@chinadaily.com.cn

E-commerce companies from Tianjin purchased agricultur­al goods worth 1.53 billion yuan ($216 million) from over 10 places in China’s less-developed western and interior regions such as Shaanxi province, the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region and Gansu province recently.

“The orders are expected to help 141,600 poverty-stricken people in the interior regions. In addition, Tianjin’s e-commerce companies will further promote the products via local e-commerce portals and media outlets,” said Zhang Qingen from the Tianjin Cooperatio­n and Exchange Office on Tuesday.

Such efforts are part of the city’s ongoing efforts to achieve China’s goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects and securing a decisive victory in poverty alleviatio­n. Chinese President Xi Jinping had stressed that lifting rural residents out of poverty by the end of 2020 is a solemn commitment of the country, and it must be fulfilled on schedule.

Chen Hongbo, director of the Policy and Regulation­s Department of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t, said that measures, including expanding products’ distributi­on channels and inspiring consumptio­n of agricultur­al products from the impoverish­ed areas, are necessary steps to further poverty relief efforts.

With even more efforts, the poverty alleviatio­n goal can be achieved on schedule, said Chen.

During the first quarter of this year, e-commerce sales in China’s 832 national-level poverty-stricken counties reached 27.75 billion yuan, up 13.3 percent on a yearly basis, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce.

To help further the cause, the ministry issued a guideline for e-commerce-enabled poverty alleviatio­n last week. Specifical­ly, the ministry said it will help enable more areas to come out of poverty through e-commerce, and guide farm product companies to build long-term and stable partnershi­ps with poverty-stricken areas.

Many provincial government­s in China have been taking targeted steps to help sell agricultur­al products from rural areas as many of them faced economic hardship due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

In Southwest China’s Yunnan province, pine mushroom sauce and dried mushroom slices from the remote Shangri-La region realized sales of over 50,000 yuan in just 10 minutes during a recent live sales gala, according to the city’s Vice-Mayor Zhang Jianfeng.

“Products from the poverty stricken areas have been facing obstacles due to traffic, logistics and oversupply constraint­s. They are increasing­ly shifting their focus to online sales,” said Li Xiaomei, general manager of Gansu Tiandi Science and Technology Co Ltd, which joined hands with e-commerce companies from Tianjin during the event.

An industry insider who did not want to be identified said that many leading e-commerce firms having high thresholds or funds are being encouraged to join the campaign so as to help goods manufactur­ers from the impoverish­ed regions gain wider market access.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, online e-commerce sales soared to 1.8 trillion yuan during the first quarter, up 5.9 percent on a yearly basis, amid the COVID19 pandemic even as retail sales struggled to make headway.

Liu Gang, director of the Institute of Economics, Nankai University, said: “The supply side was badly hit by the pandemic. Digital economy and e-commerce revolution are the new economic engines for China.”

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