Cross-border e-commerce adds vitality to growth in southwest China – China.org.cn
As a new channel for foreign trade, cross-border e-commerce has been injecting endless vitality into Chongqing Municipality, a southwest inland city with massive import and export potential.
At the 4th Western China International Fair for Investment and Trade (WCIFIT), held from Thursday to Sunday in Chongqing, researchers, e-commerce platform representatives, and foreign trade enterprises gathered, opting to tap more potential in Chongqing’s cross-border e-commerce.
Chongqing Foreseen Optics Instrument Co., Ltd. has already seen the tangible benefits brought by cross-border e-commerce. Their optical products gained 14 million yuan (about 2.1 million U.S. dollars) on the e-commerce platform last year, with a yearly increase of over 30 percent on the e-commerce platform for three years.
“Cross-border e-commerce has not only helped us go through the COVID-19 epidemic but also provides an innovative way to invigorate traditional manufacturing enterprises,” said Yang Lin, manager of the company.
Another exhibitor, Chongqing Ujoin Import and Export Trade Co., Ltd., a company specializing in auto component export, has become a leading company in Chongqing’s cross-border e-commerce, with its foreign trade volume via e-commerce increased by more than 70 times that of 2016.
From January to May, Chongqing’s cross-border e-commerce imports and exports grew by 88.9 percent year on year to 19.79 billion yuan. In 2021, Chongqing’s cross-border e-commerce imports and exports reached 32.21 billion yuan, up 63.3 percent year on year.
“Although Chongqing is an inland city, it will yield a more impactful value in cross-border e-commerce. It is because Chongqing is a base for manufacturing and a key point connecting the Yangtze River Economic Belt and regions along the Belt and Road,” said Jian Jie, a professor at Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications.
Jian added that Chongqing’s foreign trade registered 800 billion yuan last year, which indicates a strong foundation and promising future for Chongqing’s cross-border e-commerce.
Alibaba.com, an online business-to-business (B2B) marketplace for global wholesalers under the Alibaba Group, set up an office in Chongqing in 2008 and views Chongqing’s industry of auto, motorcycle, and spare components as a crucial sector to cultivate.
The export trade value of the sector accounted for 30 percent of the total exports on the platform last year, and the number increased by 119 percent year on year on the platform in the first half of this year.
In early 2021, Amazon Global Selling also set up its regional office in Chengdu in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, aiming to open a new market in western China with Chengdu and Chongqing as the key points.
Richful Deyong, a Hong Kong-based provider of integrated corporate and business services, will set up an office in Chongqing next week, hoping to help more enterprises participate in cross-border e-commerce more reasonably and legitimately.
The Chongqing government released a plan earlier this year to push forward the foreign trade development and its new modes. It aims to increase the volume of cross-border e-commerce in Chongqing to over 70 billion yuan and establish ten cross-border e-commerce pilot zones in the city in 2025.
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