Online businesses could regenerate China’s rural economy and slow the drift to cities, writes Feng Hao
The province of Shanxi, in northern China, is famous for coal mining
and the industry’s impact is etched across the landscape.
But the province’s southern counties, which lie near the Yellow River,
are known for a very different commodity - red dates.
In 2015, a slump in the market for red dates (known in Chinese as jujubes) became big news in China. In Yonghe County, over 40 million jin (20,000 tonnes) of dates were harvested, but only half were sold around Chinese New Year, the county’s busiest shopping period.
Upon hearing the news, Liu Dongdong, a Yonghe native and then university graduate working at a building and decorating firm in the provincial capital of Taiyuan, thought of Taobao, China’s eBay with around 500 million users.
What if people could sell the remaining dates online? Instead of farmers waiting for customers to find them, they could deliver directly to customers’ homes. Liu Dongdong returned home that night with dreams of opening his own online business.
E-retail giants such as Alibaba and JD.com have transformed the way people consume in China. The country now has over 500 million online shoppers, making it the biggest e-commerce market in the world, both in terms of number of consumers and total spending – and the market is still expanding.
Recently, the state has introduced a number of policies that specifically favour the development of rural e-markets. Analysts predict that the next five years will be a “golden era” for rural e-commerce. According to Alibaba research, the rural e-commerce market may already be worth 460 billion yuan (US$70 billion) in 2016.
In China’s villages people aspire to moving ‘up’, i.e. moving up the economic and social ladder by relocating to a big city.
In Yonghe County, the journey starts with moving to Yonghe town; then to Linfen, a prefecture-level city; and finally Taiyuan, Shanxi’s largest city. As more and more young people, like Liu, flock here to the cities to find work, their villages are left to deal with an even-worsening labour shortage.
For Liu, and other graduates like him working in Taiyuan, it’s hard to go home. Poverty-stricken counties, such as Yonghe, suffer from infertile land, poor transportation, high logistics costs, undeveloped industry and a constant outflow of labour.
Liu believes that e-commerce might be part of the answer to saving his hometown’s distressed economy. As well as rejuvenating the village’s economy, it supports sustainable agricultural methods used by the local farmers.
These young people, such as Liu Dongdong, are quitting jobs in the cities to return home and give running their own e-commerce business a shot.
This has big implications for distressed provincial economies. By luring graduates back to the countryside, the opportunities offered by e-commerce could help reverse the socially and economically damaging effect of ‘empty nests’, where a region’s working age population moves away leaving behind vulnerable parents, children and a distressed local industry.
At the same time, the trend could take pressure off cities, which are forced to accommodate ever bigger migrant populations, a trend that can involve increased environmental costs than if these migrants had stayed in rural areas.
Stagnant rural economies
The sandy soil of the Yellow River basin, where Liu’s hometown is situated, is ideal for growing dates. With warm days and cold nights, the earth and climate combine to create sugar-rich dates - almost every household grows some.
“It’s not that they’re no good, it’s just not enough people know about them,” he says.
Planting and harvesting dates can be backbreaking work.
“The farmers here suffer more than they do anywhere else,” sighed Yao Na, a woman from a nearby county who recently married a local. “The dates grow on steep slopes, so watering them, applying fertiliser and harvesting is really tough.”
And even after work is done, a good harvest does not necessarily mean a good income.
“It’s about finding buyers,” Liu Dongdong told chinadialogue. “If we could sell [what is produced], each household could be making over 10,000 yuan (US$1,500).”
Without buyers for their produce, farmers have no choice but to seek work elsewhere.
In the past, 20 and 30-year olds left for the cities. Now 40 and 50 year-olds are now following them having fallen on hard times, and leaving behind them ancestral arable land that often lies fallow.
Action needed
Feng Jianping was born in the 1990s and now runs a store that supplies Taobao. He moved to Beijing at 15. He smiles wistfully as he recalls the hardship of those early days, when he and his wife moved to Beijing, leaving behind his parents and an eight month-old child.
In the four years they spent working in Beijing, the couple would, at most, travel home once every three months. There was no high-speed rail then, and the journey took a whole day.
“Looking at my daughter’s eyes every time I left, that was difficult,” he said.
The opportunity offered by e-commerce has tempted them back to Yonghe and now they run an online store selling local specialities; alcohol, dates and walnuts.
Government support
The future of these online entrepreneurs, to an extent, lies in the hands of local government who grant the licences needed to operate.
Much of red tape relevant to e-commerce and agricultural produce relates to food safety. China has endured a multitude of food scares and poisonings in recent decades due to poor regulation and the widespread pollution of air, soil and water.
In October 2015 China’s “toughest ever” food safety law came into effect. It ruled that anyone selling food online – apart from unprocessed agricultural products – must have the necessary licence, with the online platform provider responsible for ensuring this is the case.
Business premises, equipment, staff, working practices and hygiene must all meet standards before a licence is issued. Zhang Shuwang, an official with the Yonghe Country Food Safety Bureau, told chinadialogue that, “health is no small matter, and food safety rules are getting more and more detailed”.
The biggest challenge for businesses on Taobao is meeting the specifications for family-run operations, such as Feng’s, that specialise in foodstuffs.
On the plus side, the new Food Safety Law holds independent businesses under its purview – those street-side sellers whose produce doesn't use packaging or quality-assurance labels. Under the law, these farmers are exempt from the need of a retail licence, an allowance which makes their trade to possible.
Profits
That means Liu Dongdong’s shop can avoid costly, time-consuming requirements to get a license. Within a month of moving back home, his family’s red dates and walnuts were advertised online for sale.
Liu ran an e-retail outlet on Taobao while he was at university, selling clothes, so he already knew the basics of running an online store. Even in the off-season, he now makes 20,000 yuan (US$3,000) profit a month from selling red dates online – far more than he made working in Taiyuan.
After only a couple of weeks, the receipts from the courier form a thick pile. Customers are spread out all over China – from major cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou to small towns in Hainan. Yonghe’s deputy county chief, Cheng Wanjun, said it’s a new way of doing business.
In 2015, a slump in the market for red dates (known in Chinese as jujubes) became big news in China. In Yonghe County, over 40 million jin (20,000 tonnes) of dates were harvested, but only half were sold around Chinese New Year, the county’s busiest shopping period.
Upon hearing the news, Liu Dongdong, a Yonghe native and then university graduate working at a building and decorating firm in the provincial capital of Taiyuan, thought of Taobao, China’s eBay with around 500 million users.
What if people could sell the remaining dates online? Instead of farmers waiting for customers to find them, they could deliver directly to customers’ homes. Liu Dongdong returned home that night with dreams of opening his own online business.
E-retail giants such as Alibaba and JD.com have transformed the way people consume in China. The country now has over 500 million online shoppers, making it the biggest e-commerce market in the world, both in terms of number of consumers and total spending – and the market is still expanding.
Recently, the state has introduced a number of policies that specifically favour the development of rural e-markets. Analysts predict that the next five years will be a “golden era” for rural e-commerce. According to Alibaba research, the rural e-commerce market may already be worth 460 billion yuan (US$70 billion) in 2016.
In China’s villages people aspire to moving ‘up’, i.e. moving up the economic and social ladder by relocating to a big city.
In Yonghe County, the journey starts with moving to Yonghe town; then to Linfen, a prefecture-level city; and finally Taiyuan, Shanxi’s largest city. As more and more young people, like Liu, flock here to the cities to find work, their villages are left to deal with an even-worsening labour shortage.
For Liu, and other graduates like him working in Taiyuan, it’s hard to go home. Poverty-stricken counties, such as Yonghe, suffer from infertile land, poor transportation, high logistics costs, undeveloped industry and a constant outflow of labour.
Liu believes that e-commerce might be part of the answer to saving his hometown’s distressed economy. As well as rejuvenating the village’s economy, it supports sustainable agricultural methods used by the local farmers.
These young people, such as Liu Dongdong, are quitting jobs in the cities to return home and give running their own e-commerce business a shot.
This has big implications for distressed provincial economies. By luring graduates back to the countryside, the opportunities offered by e-commerce could help reverse the socially and economically damaging effect of ‘empty nests’, where a region’s working age population moves away leaving behind vulnerable parents, children and a distressed local industry.
At the same time, the trend could take pressure off cities, which are forced to accommodate ever bigger migrant populations, a trend that can involve increased environmental costs than if these migrants had stayed in rural areas.
Stagnant rural economies
The sandy soil of the Yellow River basin, where Liu’s hometown is situated, is ideal for growing dates. With warm days and cold nights, the earth and climate combine to create sugar-rich dates - almost every household grows some.
“It’s not that they’re no good, it’s just not enough people know about them,” he says.
Planting and harvesting dates can be backbreaking work.
“The farmers here suffer more than they do anywhere else,” sighed Yao Na, a woman from a nearby county who recently married a local. “The dates grow on steep slopes, so watering them, applying fertiliser and harvesting is really tough.”
And even after work is done, a good harvest does not necessarily mean a good income.
“It’s about finding buyers,” Liu Dongdong told chinadialogue. “If we could sell [what is produced], each household could be making over 10,000 yuan (US$1,500).”
Without buyers for their produce, farmers have no choice but to seek work elsewhere.
In the past, 20 and 30-year olds left for the cities. Now 40 and 50 year-olds are now following them having fallen on hard times, and leaving behind them ancestral arable land that often lies fallow.
Action needed
Feng Jianping was born in the 1990s and now runs a store that supplies Taobao. He moved to Beijing at 15. He smiles wistfully as he recalls the hardship of those early days, when he and his wife moved to Beijing, leaving behind his parents and an eight month-old child.
In the four years they spent working in Beijing, the couple would, at most, travel home once every three months. There was no high-speed rail then, and the journey took a whole day.
“Looking at my daughter’s eyes every time I left, that was difficult,” he said.
The opportunity offered by e-commerce has tempted them back to Yonghe and now they run an online store selling local specialities; alcohol, dates and walnuts.
Government support
The future of these online entrepreneurs, to an extent, lies in the hands of local government who grant the licences needed to operate.
Much of red tape relevant to e-commerce and agricultural produce relates to food safety. China has endured a multitude of food scares and poisonings in recent decades due to poor regulation and the widespread pollution of air, soil and water.
In October 2015 China’s “toughest ever” food safety law came into effect. It ruled that anyone selling food online – apart from unprocessed agricultural products – must have the necessary licence, with the online platform provider responsible for ensuring this is the case.
Business premises, equipment, staff, working practices and hygiene must all meet standards before a licence is issued. Zhang Shuwang, an official with the Yonghe Country Food Safety Bureau, told chinadialogue that, “health is no small matter, and food safety rules are getting more and more detailed”.
The biggest challenge for businesses on Taobao is meeting the specifications for family-run operations, such as Feng’s, that specialise in foodstuffs.
On the plus side, the new Food Safety Law holds independent businesses under its purview – those street-side sellers whose produce doesn't use packaging or quality-assurance labels. Under the law, these farmers are exempt from the need of a retail licence, an allowance which makes their trade to possible.
Profits
That means Liu Dongdong’s shop can avoid costly, time-consuming requirements to get a license. Within a month of moving back home, his family’s red dates and walnuts were advertised online for sale.
Liu ran an e-retail outlet on Taobao while he was at university, selling clothes, so he already knew the basics of running an online store. Even in the off-season, he now makes 20,000 yuan (US$3,000) profit a month from selling red dates online – far more than he made working in Taiyuan.
After only a couple of weeks, the receipts from the courier form a thick pile. Customers are spread out all over China – from major cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou to small towns in Hainan. Yonghe’s deputy county chief, Cheng Wanjun, said it’s a new way of doing business.
Now the farmers can sell the dates all around the country. It’s a new way of doing business
Cheng Wanjun, deputy county chief, has been working to promote rural e-commerce in the area. He told chinadialogue that breakthroughs in rural e-commerce will come from improving products through commercialisation and branding. Fostering local companies and personnel, and building up their expertise, will be crucial to this, he adds.
To this end, the county government invited five teachers and 24 students from the Communication University of Shanxi to help with brand design for a soon-to-be-launched Yonghe online store.
Villagers who are interested only need to bring their computer and start to learn, at no cost. The classes cover everything – from design of branding and packages, to sourcing products, running the store, and after-sales service.
Digital divide
But Cheng has his concerns: online competition is fierce, and even if the county throws its full weight behind the companies and people involved, businesses might still not make the most of their potential.
Furthermore, broadband access is limited once you leave the county town. For example, the village of Lujiaokou to the south-west has 200 households, but only two with broadband.
Yonghe is not the only county in this situation. There is a stark digital divide between China’s cities and villages – internet penetration in rural China is only 30%, less than half of that in urban areas.
In response, central government has set a target of
bringing unlimited broadband to 98% of China’s administrative villages
by 2020.
Li Chang’an, a professor at the School of Public Administration at the University of International Business and Economics, has suggested that construction of network infrastructure in vulnerable regions should be sped up, with connectivity and more Internet skills training for rural workers.
Li Chang’an, a professor at the School of Public Administration at the University of International Business and Economics, has suggested that construction of network infrastructure in vulnerable regions should be sped up, with connectivity and more Internet skills training for rural workers.
According to Alibaba research, county-level e-commerce will require two million trained employees in 2015 and 2016.
According to Alibaba research, county-level e-commerce will require two million trained employees in 2015 and 2016.
It seems that it is finding enough qualified workers currently the biggest challenge.
Courtesy:chinadialogue
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