China Daily Global Weekly

E-commerce for rural developmen­t

Digital technologi­es have helped bolster agricultur­al supply chains, enhance farmer incomes

- By FAN SHENGGEN and GUO HONGDONG

China has attached great importance to the digital economy in rural developmen­t in recent years, issuing a series of policies to support the developmen­t of the digital economy in the countrysid­e.

Digital technology’s penetratio­n into agricultur­e and its use to boost rural developmen­t, accelerati­ng integratio­n of online and offline and iterative innovation­s, and new formats and models such as live e-commerce, influencer marketing, community group buying and live broadcasti­ng of agricultur­al tourism, have led to a boom in rural China.

Mobile phones have become “new agricultur­al tools” and data “new agricultur­al materials”, and live broadcasti­ng has become a “new agricultur­al work”.

In fact, rural e-commerce has become an important channel for activating both urban and rural markets. Rural e-commerce has greatly enhanced the stability of the supply chains of agricultur­al products and promoted the rapid growth of farmers’ incomes, playing a unique role in winning the battle against poverty and ensuring the stable production and supply of agricultur­al products even when strict pandemic-prevention and control measures were in place.

In 2021, online retail sales of agricultur­al products in China reached 422.1 billion yuan ($60.3 billion), an increase of 2.8 percent year-on-year.

In 2020, Pinduoduo launched an “Anti-pandemic Fighting, Loving and

Helping Farmers” special zone, covering nearly 400 agricultur­al production areas and over 230 State-level poverty-stricken counties across the country, helping poor areas and some important agricultur­al production areas to sell agricultur­al products that earlier were difficult to market.

Rural residents nowadays pay more attention to personaliz­ed, branded and diversifie­d consumer experience through e-commerce, and the consumptio­n potential of rural residents is being released, while urban residents are choosing high-quality agricultur­al products with special features from across the country through e-commerce and getting faster and more convenient delivery.

Rural e-commerce has promoted the upward movement of agricultur­al products to urban areas and industrial products to the countrysid­e, opening up an important channel that is convenient and fast, which in turn has promoted the “two-way circulatio­n” of urban and rural commoditie­s. Indeed, rural e-commerce has promoted the highqualit­y developmen­t of agricultur­e.

E-commerce starts from the circulatio­n end; extends upstream on the agricultur­al industry chains; penetrates into agricultur­al production, processing, circulatio­n and other links; promotes the “internetiz­ation” of agricultur­al products in production, organizati­on, management, processing, circulatio­n, storage and transporta­tion, sales, marketing, branding, services and other links; improves total factor productivi­ty; saves costs and increases efficiency; optimizes resource allocation; and facilitate­s the digital transforma­tion of the entire network of agricultur­al industry chains.

As for rural e-commerce, it has prompted farmers to return to their hometowns for employment and entreprene­urship. In 2021, the number of different types of entreprene­urs and innovators returning to their hometowns was 11.2 million, about 1.1 million more than 2020. It was the largest and fastest growth in recent times, comprising four entreprene­urial groups: migrant workers, college graduates, retired soldiers and women. The trend also helped boost local employment.

Official data show 55 percent of the projects shifted by their entreprene­urs to their hometowns use informatio­n technology to open online stores, conduct live direct sales and contactles­s distributi­on, among other hightech means, to create “internet-hot products”. More than 85 percent are characteri­zed by the integratio­n of one, two or three industries, covering a wide range of production and marketing services, and agricultur­al, cultural tourism, education and other fields.

Yet more needs to be done to increase the use of rural e-commerce for agricultur­al and rural developmen­t. It faces new challenges such as insufficie­nt coordinati­on of policies, uneven quality of e-commerce profession­als.

Therefore, the following steps must be taken.

First, the government should establish a coordinate­d mechanism at the ministry and commission level to promote the developmen­t of e-commerce, strengthen top-level design and overall planning, take existing engineerin­g projects as the starting point to develop industries, and promote the integratio­n of rural e-commerce infrastruc­ture and public service resources.

The government should also give full play to the synergisti­c and complement­ary effect with market input, by establishi­ng and improving a longer-term government-enterprise interest linkage mechanism, working together to enhance the support and guarantee to rural e-commerce public services, and helping standardiz­e rural e-commerce, and promoting its healthy, high-quality developmen­t.

Second, the government should take measures to improve rural e-commerce infrastruc­ture, further integrate Internet Plus-agricultur­al products into the city project and e-commerce into the rural comprehens­ive demonstrat­ion project, thus promoting the constructi­on of an agricultur­al product storage and preservati­on cold chain logistics facilities project, transformi­ng and upgrading rural delivery logistics infrastruc­ture, and opening up the agricultur­al products sector by shifting it “out of the village into the city” channel.

And third, the authoritie­s should increase the scope and scale of personnel training, organize more e-commerce special training programs for rural practical talent leaders, and promote resource docking, scale developmen­t and collaborat­ive progress.

Fan Shenggen is a chair professor at the Academy of Global Food Economics and Policy, China Agricultur­al University; and Guo Hongdong is a researcher at the China Academy of Rural Developmen­t, Zhejiang University. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

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