E-commerce in China
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
China is the world's largest market for e-commerce. Domestic e-commerce firms have the greatest share of China's market, with foreign companies having a comparatively small presence. The expansion of e-commerce in China has resulted in particular e-commerce patterns like the development of Taobao villages and livestreaming e-commerce.
E-commerce in China is regulated through a variety of means, particularly China's 2018 E-Commerce Law.
In the early 2000s, China's e-commerce lagged behind that of other major economies.[1]: 2 When the 2008 financial crisis resulted in decreased demand from Western markets, Chinese manufacturers re-oriented towards the domestic market.[1]: 75 Many focused on domestic online marketing, either through creating their own brands or selling to other Chinese online sellers.[1]: 75 In turn, this pivot by Chinese manufacturers increased the quantity and diversity of products available online, leading to a major increase in e-commerce in China.[1]: 75 In 2008 alone, online retail sales in China increased by a factor of 26.[1]: 75
Since 2013, China is the world's largest e-commerce market.[2]: 99 Its domestic e-commerce market was an estimated US$899 billion in 2016.[3] China accounted for 42.4% of worldwide retail e-commerce in that year, the most of any country.[4]: 110 In 2019, online retail sales were 21% of China's total retail sales.[1]: 4 As of late 2022, approximately 850 million Chinese individuals shop online and sectors related to e-commerce employ 69 million people in the country.[1]: 1 In 2023, nearly 50% of worldwide online sales took place from China.[1]: 2
The rapid rise of e-commerce in China is facilitated by mobile payment systems such as Alipay and WeChat Pay.[5] These payment platforms help simplify the transaction process and ensure the security of transactions to win the trust of consumers. Therefore, the mobile payment system has completely changed the daily life of the Chinese people and the future business model.[5] The rise of e-commerce has in turn facilitated the rapid adoption of digital payment and mobile wallets.[1]: 2
The expansion of Chinese e-commerce has also prompted the growth of an efficient express delivery industry.[1]: 158 As of 2020, express delivery companies served 98% of all Chinese townships and half of all villages.[1]: 158–159 In that same year, Chinese express delivery accounted for 83 billion parcels, which was more than half of the global total.[1]: 158
E-commerce contributed substantially to China's COVID-19 pandemic response by facilitating fast delivery of personal protective equipment, food, and daily use consumer goods during lockdowns.[1]: 159
Since 2020, cross-border e-commerce has expanded significantly and Chinese sellers have increased their presence on non-domestic platforms like Amazon.[1]: 192
The expansion of e-commerce in China is an example of leapfrogging development.[1]: 4 Although China was a latecomer to e-Commerce in comparison to other major economies, it has now grown beyond them in both total market size and on a per capita basis.[1]: 4
E-commerce patterns
Domestic companies like Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo have the largest share of China's e-commerce market.[2]: 99 [6]Foreign companies like Amazon and EBay have not gained significant shares in the market.[2]: 99 Because of this, Alibaba's Taobao/Tmall ecosystem captures around 46% of the market share with platforms like the B2B site Alibaba and consumer retail JD.com holding around 27% with their ability for same day delivery and control of logistics domestically. With many of these companies having their own payment applications like AliPay and WeChat pay they are able to prevent entry from foreign companies. [7]
In 2015, the State Council promoted the Internet Plus initiative, a five-year plan to integrate traditional manufacturing and service industries with big data, cloud computing, and Internet of things technology.[2]: 44 The State Council provided support for Internet Plus through policy support in area including cross-border e-commerce and rural e-commerce.[2]: 44
E-commerce in China is primarily platform based.[1]: 6 China's major e-commerce platforms do not sell their own products, but instead host tens of millions of third party sellers which are often small enterprises or microbusinesses.[1]: 4 The vast majority of sellers are individuals doing business.[1]: 89 The majority of e-commerce sales in China are non-branded products or lesser known brands.[1]: 4
The expansion of e-commerce in China has resulted in the development of Taobao Villages, clusters of e-commerce businesses operating in rural areas.[4]: 112 Because Taobao villages have increased the incomes or rural people and entrepreneurship in rural China, Taobao villages have become a component of rural revitalization strategies.[8]: 278 E-commerce also benefits rural people more broadly through the consumption effect of lowering costs of living and therefore enhancing purchasing power.[1]: 19 By bringing economic benefits to remote and economically challenged villages, e-commerce decreases cross-regional inequalities in China.[1]: 159 In 2015, the Ministry of Finance allocated 2 billion RMB to establish e-commerce centers in some of the least developed areas of China.[1]: 128
An analysis by academic Lizhi Liu published in 2024 finds that cities with economies traditionally reliant on natural resources (such as Daqing and Yulin) rank among the Chinese cities with the lowest level of e-commerce development. Liu describes this as an example of resource curse.[1]: 97
The increase in e-commerce in urban areas has led to loss of sales for brick and mortar stores.[1]: 158 In turn, this has led to an increase in the "new retail" concept, which seeks to tie online and offline shopping experiences together, for example by allowing customers to try products in offline "experience stores" that they can then order online.[1]: 148
Some local governments have created e-commerce platforms in an effort to facilitate sales of local products.[1]: 43 With the exception of the business-to-business platform Yiwugo.com (created by the Yiwu city government and a state-owned enterprise), these platforms have not been commercially successful.[1]: 43
Livestreaming e-commerce in China was initiated by fashion e-commerce platform Mogujie in 2016.[9] In the same year, it was picked up and gradually made popular by Alibaba, who turned live commerce into a fixture in its annual Singles' Day shopping festivals.[10] The livestreaming trend has particularly benefited sales of agricultural products through e-commerce, with streamers presenting live tastings.[1]: 160
Chinese e-commerce spending peaks every year during Singles' Day, which is the world's largest online shopping event.[1]: 1
The online platforms of cross-border e-commerce serve as significant venues for language services. The analytical approach to their language services involves conducting field studies on typical cross-border e-commerce platforms and their language service partners, focusing on analyzing the development models and service models of their language services. Some translations lack an in-depth understanding of the target market's culture and consumption habits, resulting in content that is rigid and poorly adapted to the local context, thereby negatively impacting user experience and brand perception.[11][12]