China Daily

Golden online era dawns for cloud, big data, AI

- By CHENG YU and HU MEIDONG in fujian Contact the writers at chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s digital economy, or D-economy, has entered a “golden era” and has become a new economic growth engine, said an expert from the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, a government think tank.

The internet, and technologi­es like cloud computing, big data and artificial intelligen­ce, or AI, are helping transform several industries and sectors, thereby driving economic growth, he said.

“The country’s digital economy has stepped into a new phase, with the focus shifting from high-speed growth to both quantity and quality developmen­t,” said Lu Chuncong, director of the Policy and Economic Research Institute, at CAICT.

The nation’s digital economy generated 27.2 trillion yuan ($4.31 trillion) in scale last year, up 20 percent yearon-year and higher than that of China’s overall economic growth of 6.9 percent in 2017, CAICT data showed.

“Digital economy’s contributi­on to GDP (which was 82 trillion yuan) exceeded 33 percent last year,” said Lu.

The contributi­on of digital economy to gross domestic product is expected to approach or even surpass the correspond­ing figure in developed countries.

According to him, China’s technology innovation has helped transform industry from a follower to a world leader, with the informatio­n technology and telecommun­ications sectors contributi­ng the most.

The country’s ongoing shift to the 5G technology, for example, marks important progress of D-economy.

China lagged behind some other countries in issuing 4G and 3G licenses. But in 5G, the nation has played a crucial role in partnering with other countries to finalize global standards.

“5G is just a few steps away from commercial use, with companies competing and cooperatin­g with each other to establish a beachhead in the technology,” said Xiang Ligang, CEO of a telecoms industry website.

5G devices will be ready for commercial applicatio­ns in China in 2019. We’ll be among the first batch of countries to issue 5G licenses in the world, most likely between the second half of 2019 and the first half of 2020..

In addition, the burgeoning digital economy has played an important role in creating jobs. Last year, 171 million people worked in China’s digital economy-related sectors, accounting for 22 percent of the total employment.

“However, China still lagged behind in some core technologi­es compared with developed countries, which requires us to accelerate core technology breakthrou­ghs,” said Lu.

He said the country should bolster basic technologi­es while also mapping out the next generation of technologi­es in advance. It should also expand channels linking basic research and technology innovation.

“The country is expected to increase investment and encourage more industry-oriented investment­s in key and weak areas,” said Lu.

 ?? WANG JIANKANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Vistors interact with a robot at the 2018 AI products expo in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, on May 10.
WANG JIANKANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Vistors interact with a robot at the 2018 AI products expo in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, on May 10.

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