China Daily

Rural areas to benefit from expansion of e-commerce

- By LI HONGYANG lihongyang@chinadaily.com.cn

China is committed to expanding e-commerce in rural areas to promote agricultur­al products and increase farmers’ incomes, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said.

The ministry will push the establishm­ent of a temperatur­e-controlled supply chain to improve logistics between rural and urban areas, Han Jun, vice-minister of the ministry, said at a news conference organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office on Friday.

New policies will be adopted to encourage the presence of e-commerce companies in rural areas, while efforts will be made to help farmers better process agricultur­al products, he said.

“E-commerce has created many business opportunit­ies in rural areas,” he said, adding that even the most remote and poor villages are connected with e-commerce.

Data from the Ministry of Commerce showed that online retail sales in rural China reached 1.37 trillion yuan ($204 billion) last year, up 30.4 percent year-on-year, providing jobs for 28 million farmers.

Farmers can now sell chicken and organic vegetables to customers in the city directly, thanks to platforms such as WeChat, he said.

The vice-minister also stressed that the government will take measures to support the developmen­t of “small rural households”, or those with arable land of less than 0.67 hectares. According to the third national agricultur­al census released by the National Bureau of Statistics in 2017, there are 210 million rural households in this category, accounting for about 90 percent of rural households.

A recent guideline from the central authority urged government­s at all levels to assist the developmen­t of small rural households.

Wu Hongyao, a senior official with the Office of the Central Rural Work Leading Group, said at the conference that these small rural households need support both in market informatio­n and farming technology.

“Small rural households should be gradually directed onto the track of modern agricultur­e. We aim to provide services that households can’t easily handle, such as crop pest control, animal disease prevention and control, utilizatio­n technology for agricultur­al waste and sales channel promotion.

“From the field to the food table, there are still a lot of support policies about services to be developed in rural areas and that will be the major point of our work for the next step,” he said.

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