Global Times

Villages going online

Rural economy gets boost from e-commerce

- By Xie Jun

Internet penetratio­n is increasing in rural China, which is home to a large proportion of the population but is still struggling to shrug off poverty and backwardne­ss.

Now, the internet is not only changing the living habits of many rural residents but is also giving them new ways to earn money in addition to traditiona­l but less lucrative options like farming.

The trend also comes as the Chinese government is seeking new areas of economic momentum, with the country facing increasing pressure amid the Sino-US trade tension.

New way of life

A rural resident surnamed Jin, who runs a small shop selling daily necessity products in Zhuji, East China’s Zhejiang Province, said that the internet has become a vital part of her life and the lives of her neighbors.

“Now at my shop, mobile payment is commonly used by the younger generation. E-commerce is also standard. Almost every family in my village uses the internet for shopping, and in my family we receive packages from express delivery companies almost on a daily basis,” she told the Global Times on Tuesday.

She also said the internet has opened up new business opportunit­ies for the village people.

“I know several people in my village who have opened family plants and sell specialty products like nutcracker­s on the internet. I hear that their business is quite good,” she said.

Liu Dingding, a Beijing-based internet analyst, who has visited many villages in recent years, also said that the internet has brought profits to rural areas of China.

“Unlike urban regions, which have different types of industries, in rural China e-commerce is often the only way for people to get richer, particular­ly in really impoverish­ed areas,” Liu said, adding that he had been to some very underprivi­leged homes, like cave houses, that had unobstruct­ed 4G network signals.

Liu also mentioned a county named Linxian in North China’s Shanxi Province, which has made money by selling dates on the internet, and he said there are many other similar examples.

“Also, the e-commerce business opportunit­ies have pushed some local government­s to improve logistics and infrastruc­ture constructi­on,” Liu said.

Major e-commerce websites like JD.com and Taobao have launched campaigns to push e-commerce business in rural areas. The “Rural Taobao” campaign launched by Alibaba, for instance, has prompted many rural residents to sell farming products and other goods on the internet.

Online retail sales reached 1.24 trillion yuan ($182 billion) in 2017, up by 39.1 percent on a yearly basis, according to an e-commerce report published by the Ministry of Commerce in May.

Credit system needed

Ma Wenfeng, a senior analyst at Beijing Orient Agribusine­ss Consultanc­y, said that the internet has changed China’s rural landscape to a great extent.

“Normally, the intermedia­te links among rural sales of products are very complicate­d, which has driven up commodity prices. But now with the help of the internet, such costs have been significan­tly reduced. This has increased the profit potential for rural sellers,” he told the Global Times on Tuesday.

But he said that for the internet to play a bigger role in the rural economy, the government should set up a credit system, like clarifying product informatio­n, seller informatio­n and buyer informatio­n to make business more transparen­t and standardiz­ed.

“Unlike urban regions, which have different types of industries, in rural China e-commerce is often the only way for people to get richer.” Liu Dingding Beijing-based internet analyst

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: VCG ?? An employee of an e-commerce platform takes a photo of chickens that will be sold online in Jiehe village, East China’s Jiangsu Province.
Photo: VCG An employee of an e-commerce platform takes a photo of chickens that will be sold online in Jiehe village, East China’s Jiangsu Province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China