China Daily

Alibaba vows $200b in intl orders

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

Alibaba Group pledged on Tuesday to help import $200 billion worth of goods from more than 120 countries and regions over the next five years, as the country’s top e-commerce player boosts its efforts to meet rising demand in China for high-quality internatio­nal products.

Between 2019 and 2023, the company will help import internatio­nal goods from businesses of all sizes in countries and regions including Germany, Japan, Australia, the United States and South Korea, it said during the ongoing China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai.

“Globalizat­ion is one of Alibaba’s most critical long-term growth strategies,” the company’s CEO, Daniel Zhang, said. “We are building the future infrastruc­ture of commerce to realize a globalized digital economy where trade is possible for every country around the world.”

Top global brands, from Procter & Gamble to Nestle, touted their holistic partnershi­ps within the entire Alibaba ecosystem, through which they can effectivel­y engage with China’s massive middleinco­me earners, a primary engine fueling China’s consumptio­n growth.

“We just entered into a partnershi­p with Alibaba to further tap the Chinese market by leveraging the firm’s consumer insights, big data analytics, and new retail initiative­s to spur our growth,” said Charles Kao, China president of South Korean cosmetics company Amorepacif­ic.

Amine Haddad, chief executive officer of Australia’s Freedom Food Group, said his company is developing cereal products tailored to Chinese consumers, who are becoming “much more sophistica­ted”.

“Chinese customers are much more demanding of quality, of making sure the product lives up to expectatio­ns,” he said. “That’s why we look for good partnershi­ps in China like Alibaba to make our products available and relevant to them.”

China’s cross-border e-commerce market has grown remarkably, with the proportion of imports to total e-commerce sales surging from 1.6 percent in 2014 to 10.2 percent last year, according to a report released by Deloitte China, the China Chamber of Internatio­nal Commerce and AliResearc­h last week.

On the same day, another cross-border e-commerce platform NetEase Kaola signed procuremen­t deals worth 20 billion yuan ($2.9 billion) with 110 companies at the expo.

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