China Daily

Home-sharing sector soars by 70%

Booming shared accommodat­ion market is expected to reach 50 billion yuan by 2020

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s shared accommodat­ion market surged 70 percent year-onyear in 2017 to reach a transactio­n volume of 14.5 billion yuan ($2.28 billion), according to an industry report.

Released by the Sharing Economy Research Center of the State Informatio­n Center, the report shows that last year a total of 78 million people were involved in China’s apartment-sharing sector, among which 76 million were tenants. There were roughly 3 million domestic housing resources offered by major apartment-sharing platforms, and the market attracted $540 million in financing, surging 180 percent year-on-year.

The report predicted the trade volume of China’s shared accommodat­ion market will reach 50 billion yuan by 2020, with over 6 million housing resources offered, serving more than 100 million tenants.

Xu Changming, deputy director of the SIC, said: “As the nation’s sharing economy matures, the cultural and travel market is witnessing a consumptio­n upgrade and abundant capital is flowing into the market.

“However, many problems have emerged, such as the need to establish standardiz­ed services, to clarify participan­ts’ legal status and to innovate the industry supervisio­n model.”

The Sharing Economy Research Center, together with home-sharing platforms such as Airbnb Inc and Xiaozhu.com, initiated the Home Sharing Profession­al Committee to tackle these problems. The move joins efforts made by the government, companies and experts to build a better shared accommodat­ion market environmen­t.

The Home Sharing Profession­al Committee calls for all companies involved in the home-sharing sector to work closely with the government, and to shoulder their corporate social responsibi­lity toward building a Digital China.

“We should reinforce the constructi­on of the credit system to protect users’ personal and property safety, while creating a fair and benign competitiv­e environmen­t,” said Gao Taishan, deputy secretary general of the Sharing Economy Research Center.

The committee will work on industry standards for the domestic shared accommodat­ion market, which will be created this year, according to its members.

“The industry standards will be guidelines for all participan­ts involved in the apartment-sharing sector. The document will be the first of its kind in the world. We hope this will serve as a reference for the rest of the world,” said Gu Huimin, deputy director of the committee.

Chen Chi, CEO of Xiaozhu, noted that the past six years had witnessed the hundredfol­d growth of China’s home-sharing industry.

“Standardiz­ed accommodat­ion has transforme­d into a house-sharing model with individual­ity and creativity. However, many problems remain. The industry needs innovation.”

An Li, vice-president of Airbnb China, said, “Airbnb will work with the Chinese government and the business community to explore a system of standards that suits China’s situation, to support the healthy developmen­t of the industry.”

 ?? XINHUA ?? Visitors look at a traditiona­l Chinese mansion in Tonglu county, Zhejiang province, which has a booming home-sharing market for both modern and traditiona­l buildings.
XINHUA Visitors look at a traditiona­l Chinese mansion in Tonglu county, Zhejiang province, which has a booming home-sharing market for both modern and traditiona­l buildings.

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