Twenty Years on the Internet
2019-08-06byLinYu
by Lin Yu
In the early 1970s, the fifth technological revolution featuring information and computer technology began with the emergence of considerable new infrastructure such as the internet, digital remote communications, high-speed logistics and transportation systems and new types of power grids.
“As an icon of the fifth technological revolution, e-commerce has undergone a process from brewing, outbreak, clustering and expansion to maturity during the past 20 years in China,” remarked Professor Ouyang Rihui at China Internet Economic Research Institute of the Central University of Finance and Economics, who conducted a long-term study on the influence of the fifth technological revolution on Chinas economy, especially the internet economy.
E-commerce Changing Consumption
In April 1994, China achieved full functional connectivity with the internet. Over the following decade, Dangdang, Taobao, JD and other domestic e-commerce enterprises emerged such as some foreign e-commerce giants as eBay and Amazon also entered the Chinese market.
In 2005, the State Council of China issued the first guidelines to boost the development of e-commerce when the scale of Chinese netizens began to grow rapidly, competition in e-commerce business intensified, and technology in the field entered a period of comprehensive innovation.
In the early stage of e-commerce development, sellers and buyers lacked mutual trust, and procedures to use online banking services were very complicated. Taobao, a major online shopping website run by Alibaba, broke the payment bottleneck by launching a thirdparty online payment solution. In 2005, Alipay became an independent third-party mobile and online payment platform. Since then, JD, Suning and other e-commerce giants have also released online payment products.
The boom of e-commerce produced huge demand for logistics services. The rise of logistics companies such as SF Express, YTO Express, STO Express, ZTO Express, Yunda Express and Best Express further bolstered the rapid development of e-commerce in China.
Professor Ouyang believes that e-commerce transaction services, online payments, logistics and other supportive and derivative services compose an e-commerce ecosystem nearing perfection.
Nowadays, each step of Chinese consumers shopping process has achieved digitalization, from discovering and researching commodities to purchase, payment, delivery, and post-sale service—everything is conducted online. The digitalization level of Chinese consumer behavior is number one in the world. According to a joint survey conducted by Boston Consulting Group, Ali Research Institute, and Baidu Research, Chinas online retail sales accounted for 16.4 percent of total social consumer goods purchased in 2016, with a proportion 1.5 times higher than that of the United States.
Data from the China Internet Association shows that the total amount of e-commerce transactions in China reached 3.14 trillion yuan(US$457billion) in 2008, and the figure grew tenfold to 31.63 trillion yuan in (US$4.6 trillion) 2018.
Over the past five years, the Belt and Road Initiative has received wide support around the world, and e-commerce cooperation between China and other participating countries has developed rapidly. Through cross-border e-commerce, Chinese goods have been sold to more than 100 countries and regions such as Russia, Israel, South Korea, Vietnam and more.
According to the statistics from the Ministry of Commerce, in 2018, Chinas total cross-border e-commerce retail sales reached 134.7 billion yuan (US$19.62 billion), an increase of 50 percent year-on-year. At the same time, commodities from all over the world were sold to Chinese consumers through cross-border e-commerce platforms.
New Growth Drivers
“E-commerce has demonstrated unprecedented potential in increasing consumption, sustaining growth, adjusting economic structure and promoting economic transformation,” stressed Professor Ouyang. He believes that e-commerce provides broad development space for entrepreneurship and innovation and serves as an important driving force for Chinas economic and social development and technological innovation.
In 2009, the mobile internet began to emerge. In 2012, the number of Chinas mobile internet users surpassed that of PC users for the first time. Thanks to the wide coverage of 3G and 4G mobile networks and the popularity of smartphones, the normalization of mobile payments changed the offline payment habits of Chinese consumers, and mobile phones replaced wallets.
Nowadays, whether in large chain stores like Carrefour and Walmart or grocery stores and roadside food stands, people can easily complete payments just by scanning a QR code with their mobile phones.
Cashless society has taken shape in many Chinese cities. Hangzhou in Chinas southeastern Zhejiang Province, where Alibabas headquarters is located, has become a leading“cashless city.”
Since 2015, innovative digital applications and business models have been springing up continuously. The platform economy and the sharing economy have seen fierce competition among major players including food delivery platforms Meituan and Ele.me, car-hailing platforms such as Didi Chuxing and Dida Chuxing, and bicycle-sharing enterprises such as Mobike and Hellobike.
The integration of online and offline services has been the general trend of the internet economy. In fact, many traditional industries, including transportation, medical care, entertainment, education and tourism, have quickened the pace to embrace the internet. The catering industry is a good example: Digitalization has upended the dining habits of Chinese consumers. Every step of dining from queuing, ordering, delivery and payment to membership management is now conducted on mobile apps.
The joint survey released by Boston Consulting Group, Ali Research Institute, and Baidu Research showed that the number of digitalized restaurants in China exceeds 600,000, covering more than 200 cities.
In the future, the maturity of 5G technology and the consumption-based internet economy will further drive the development of the industrial internet, and the manufacturing industry will integrate deeper with the internet. An even bigger change in the internet economy is on the horizon.