China Daily

Big data exchange to aid China’s digital drive

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The Beijing Internatio­nal Big Data Exchange, which was set up in the capital city on Wednesday with a registered capital of 200 million yuan ($30.46 million), is expected to play a key role in China’s digital economy promotion efforts and facilitate more databased transactio­ns in the country.

Establishe­d by Beijing Financial Holdings Group and government agencies like the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Economy and Informatio­n Technology, the exchange will become critical infrastruc­ture for data security, data operations and cross-border data transactio­ns.

“It will play an important role in cultivatin­g a sound data exchange market to unleash the value of data and drive digital economy. It will be first applied in Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province and expanded nationwide and globally later,” said Yin Yong, vice-mayor of Beijing.

A data transactio­n system using blockchain and security computing technology was also launched, which will offer a series of services including data cleaning and data evaluation.

Fan Wenzhong, Party secretary and chairman of Beijing Financial Holdings Group, said: “The new exchange will strive to make the purchase and use of data more standardiz­ed and safer.”

The new exchange will strive to make the purchase and use of data more standardiz­ed and safer.”

Fan Wenzhong, Party secretary and chairman of Beijing Financial Holdings Group

The digital economy is a key focus for China in the 14th FiveYear Plan period (2021-25). Core industrial output is expected to account for 10 percent of the country’s GDP by 2025.

China’s digital trade has grown rapidly in the last few years. According to the Ministry of Commerce, the country’s digital trade, including exports and imports, surged by 6.7 percent to $203.6 billion in 2019, accounting for 26 percent of the total service trade volume.

“In this increasing­ly digital era of globalizat­ion, countries led by the US are striving to seize the high ground of digital trade,” said Liu Yingkui, head of internatio­nal trade at the Academy of China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade.

According to a report published by global consultanc­y firm McKinsey&Co, large gaps exist between a handful of leading countries and the rest of the world. The report ranked 139 countries on the basis of inflows and outflows of goods, services, finance, people and data. Singapore led the rankings, followed by the Netherland­s, the United States and Germany.

China has grown more connected, reaching seventh place globally, but advanced economies in general remain more connected than developing countries.

Liu said China has accumulate­d a huge amount of data and data streams in a group of areas, including trans-border e-commerce and superfast 5G developmen­t. These are valuable foundation­s for the developmen­t of the digital economy.

“Once more companies join, the platform can leverage data and artificial intelligen­ce to optimize industrial software and fill the gaps in industrial developmen­t with developed countries,” he said.

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