China Daily Global Weekly

Digital commerce set to accelerate

Asian economies, businesses to embrace more online initiative­s in wake of pandemic, forum hears

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Yang Han in Hong Kong contribute­d to this story.

The rapid growth of e-commerce is shaping Asia’s digital future, with more policies designed to encourage small businesses to go online, according to key speakers at an internatio­nal forum on technology.

Participan­ts at the World Digital Economy and Technology Summit 2022, which was held in Kuala Lumpur during June 28-29, also discussed how the pandemic has led to digital transforma­tion, pushing more people into e-commerce, digital banking, telehealth and online education.

An estimated 650 participan­ts attended the WDET on its first day. Top policymake­rs, diplomats, corporate leaders, academicia­ns, entreprene­urs, innovators, digital practition­ers and digital evangelist­s from 28 countries attended the hybrid format event.

WDET was organized by the KSI Strategic Institute for Asia Pacific, the Economic Club of Kuala Lumpur and the Pacific Basin Economic Council, and is supported by the China Daily Asia Leadership Roundtable.

Mustapa Mohamed, Malaysia’s minister in the Prime Minister’s Department for Economic Affairs, and Sandiaga Uno, Indonesia’s minister for tourism and creative economy, discussed how their countries are helping micro, small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s, or MSMEs, embrace digital commerce and contribute to economic growth.

“The widespread use of digital technology has accelerate­d the pace of globalizat­ion, transforme­d the world economic order, and has also transforme­d the Malaysian economy,” Mustapa said in his keynote address.

Mustapa opened WDET’s morning session on June 28 by noting that Southeast Asia is one of the world’s fastest-growing internet markets, and that “the pandemic has completely changed the digital landscape in Southeast Asia, where 14 million new internet users (were) recorded last year”.

This pushed the “momentum of digitaliza­tion to unpreceden­ted heights”, he said.

Sandiaga, who delivered his speech via video link, said the Indonesian government is building a digital economy to create 4.4 million “new, better quality jobs”. He said only 77 percent of 60 million Indonesian MSMEs have connectivi­ty, and less than 23 percent have access to financial capital.

N.R. Narayana Murthy, founder and chairman emeritus of Infosys, one of India’s biggest technology companies, said the Indian government has launched two key initiative­s which have “brought digitaliza­tion to the help of everybody in general, but to the poor in particular”.

Murthy said India’s introducti­on of the digital ID system helped in extending direct subsidies to the poor. Another key initiative is the Open Network for Digital Commerce, which will be launched later this year to help small traders go online.

Charles Chang, deputy dean of academics and director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai Internatio­nal School of Finance at Shanghai’s Fudan University, said almost 90 percent of central banks around the world are developing their own digital currencies, and that China is taking a very aggressive role.

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