China Daily

Digital economy gives quality edge to growth, innovation

Traditiona­l industries are back in vigor, and jobs increase on spread of technology

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BEIJING – A booming digital economy is reshaping China’s economic landscape as the spread of technology such as big data and artificial intelligen­ce or AI revives traditiona­l industries and casts new light on high-quality developmen­t.

Risk-takers

The country’s digital economy amounted to 22.58 trillion yuan (about $3.43 trillion) last year, ranking second globally and accounting for around 30 percent of national GDP.

Its near 20-percent growth substantia­lly outpaced the overall economy, which grew 6.7 percent in 2016.

The trend is likely to continue in the future and is expected to hit $16 trillion by 2035.

“The digital economy has become a core engine powering China’s economic growth,” said Pony Ma, founder of internet giant Tencent.

The company has plowed big money into forging competitiv­eness in fintech (financial technologi­es) and big data, and recorded strong growth in games, digital content, online advertisin­g and payments in the third quarter.

“China is already more digitized than many observers appreciate and has the potential to set the world’s digital frontier in coming decades,” the McKinsey Global Institute said in a report.

As of June, there were 3.89 billion internet users around the world, of whom 751 million were in China. The enormous number of web users has created room for risk-takers in e-commerce, mobile payments and other emerging areas to stretch their wings.

With leading online retailers Alibaba and JD.com, China is the world’s largest e-commerce market, accounting for more than 40 percent of the value of worldwide transactio­ns, up from less than 1 percent a decade ago. In terms of mobile payments, China has a transactio­n value 11 times that of the United States.

“The digital economy is making greater contributi­on to the national economy and rising as a fresh driver of economic transforma­tion and upgrades,” said Lin Xiunian, deputy head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planner.

Growth points

At the recent three-day Central Economic Work Conference, China’s policymake­rs pledged to steer the economy onto a new path featuring high-quality rather than high-speed growth.

Digital technology will give a push to the shift, revitalizi­ng sluggish sectors and creating new growth points.

“China will briskly foster new growth drivers, improve technologi­cal innovation, push for upgrades of traditiona­l sectors, and foster innovative, leading businesses,” according to a statement of the key meeting.

The government has rolled out an array of policies such as “Made in China 2025” and “Internet Plus” strategies to spur the integratio­n of internet technologi­es and manufactur­ing, as well as other traditiona­l sectors.

“After the process of digitizati­on, businesses will see a 30-percent increase in production efficiency on average and a 20-percent drop in operationa­l costs,” the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said.

Wu Hequan, an academic with the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said big data technology would redefine a series of sectors including finance, medical care, manufactur­ing, logistics and transporta­tion, and prompt automobile, education and tourism to form new business models.

The food delivery unit of Meituan Dianping, China’s largest group deals site, hires around 500,000 couriers, 31 percent of whom come from declining traditiona­l industries and 10 percent from poor areas.

“Our services create employment and value, and represent the future of the economy,” said Wang Xing, chief executive of Meituan Dianping.

Rising innovators

The digital economy is backed by numerous homegrown Chinese tech firms developing from followers to leaders in the internatio­nal tech community.

“China’s three internet giants are building a rich digital ecosystem that is now spreading beyond them. Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent ... are driving technical performanc­e such as computing efficiency to set new world-class standards,” the MGI said.

Investment has also poured in. The MGI said China was among the world’s top three destinatio­ns for venture capital in key types of digital technology, including autonomous vehicles, 3-D printing, robotics, drones and AI.

One in three of the world’s 262 unicorns (or startups valued at more than $1 billion) is Chinese, commanding 43 percent of the global value of these companies.

The government has promised tax breaks, financing support and other favorable policies to help innovative firms sprout and grow, and expects to see more domestic players able to take on internatio­nal rivals.

“China is already a global digital economy, and it is going to have a greater impact on the global digital world,” said Jonathan Woetzel, senior partner at McKinsey.

The digital economy has become a core engine powering China’s economic growth.”

Pony Ma, founder of internet giant Tencent

30 percent

share of China’s digital economy in national GDP last year

 ?? WU HUANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors interact with a robot on the opening day of the Xiaoshan Robot Expo Center in Zhejiang province on Dec 23. Xiaoshan township has more than 30 companies that make robots used in industries, 3-D printing, etc.
WU HUANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors interact with a robot on the opening day of the Xiaoshan Robot Expo Center in Zhejiang province on Dec 23. Xiaoshan township has more than 30 companies that make robots used in industries, 3-D printing, etc.

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