China Daily (Hong Kong)

Online sales of rural products up ninefold

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Online sales of products from rural areas have grown more than ninefold since 20 14, reaching 1. 7 trillion yuan ($256. 7 billion) this year, thanks to the rapid expansion of internet coverage in China’ s vast countrysid­e, an official said on Friday.

They were worth 180 billion yuan six years ago, before the launch of a program in 2015 to bolster internet access in some 130,000 rural villages across the nation, said Yang Xiaowei, deputy head of the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China.

As par t of a sweeping drive to end absolute poverty before 2021, the program has boosted internet coverage in impoverish­ed villages from less than 70 percent to 98 percent over the past five years, he told a news conference held by the State Council Informatio­n Office in Beijing.

Sales of agricultur­al products are a major source of rural income, and the central authoritie­s have ramped up efforts in recent years to promote sales in wealthier urban areas through channels such as brickandmo­rtar stores and vending machines.

As the internet has trickled to some of China’ s most povertystr­icken villages—such as those in the mountains of Guizhou and Sichuan provinces—the poverty relief authoritie­s have placed greater emphasis on combating rural poverty using ecommerce, as well as improving infrastruc­ture such as roads and cold storage facilities.

Last year, for example, the AllChina Federation of Supply and Marketing Cooperativ­es launched fupin832.com, a government­endorsed ecommerce platform used to sell officially recognized poverty relief products.

Online influencer­s including Viya and Li Jiaqi, household names among affluent young city dwellers, have used livestream­ing sessions to help combat lackluster sales of rural produce in the wake of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“Ecommerce has been implemente­d in all China’s 832 impoverish­ed counties,” Yang said.

Hong Tianyun, deputy head of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t, the top antipover ty office, said the livestream­ers’ efforts had helped reduce the amount of money siphoned off by middlemen and bolstered sales, but more rules were needed to guarantee product quality and prevent people from profiting under the name of poverty relief.

“It’s not allowed to sell dog meat as mutton,” he said, using a Chinese proverb about false pretenses.

The expansion of digital infrastruc­ture has also lent momentum to the nation ’s moves to promote compulsory education and affordable healthcare in poor regions.

Figures from the cyberspace administra­tion show that internet coverage in schools — including small ones in farflung regions — rose from 79.2 percent in 2016 to 98.7 percent as of August, allowing rural students tot akee classes taught by celebrity teachers from big cities.

 ?? NIU SHUPEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A seller introduces farm products during a livestream in Qixian county, Henan province, on Oct 29. The county has promoted online business models in recent years to create jobs, reduce poverty and increase people’s incomes.
NIU SHUPEI / FOR CHINA DAILY A seller introduces farm products during a livestream in Qixian county, Henan province, on Oct 29. The county has promoted online business models in recent years to create jobs, reduce poverty and increase people’s incomes.

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