E-commerce, dubbed as the "new
engine" of growth, is helping China sustain its foreign trade at a time
when the nation's exports and imports have been decelerating for months, said
Vice-minister of Commerce Jiang Yaoping.
During a press conference on China's
E-commerce Report 2008-2009, he said China's e-commerce industry will grow
"at a high speed" in the coming years and the nation is soon expected
to overtake Japan as the world's third-largest nation in terms of value of
e-commerce transactions, given that e-commerce is gaining recognition
nationwide.

"Besides helping enterprises tap new
markets, reduce costs and cope with the financial crisis, e-commerce also plays
a bigger role in assisting China to stabilize exports and stimulate domestic
demand," said Jiang.
While demand from developed regions such as
North America, European Union, Japan and South Korea remains sluggish amid a
weak global economic recovery, he said China's manufacturers and exporters are
shifting to emerging markets such as the Middle East and Latin America to tap
into new growth via e-commerce.
China's export growth eased off for three
consecutive months since May and imports saw a decline for five straight
months. However, the slowdown would be sustained in the coming months of the
year, said a spokesperson from the Ministry of Commerce.
China's e-commerce has grown rapidly during
the financial crisis. In 2008, Internet sales grew by 44.8 percent from a year
earlier to 3.14 trillion yuan ($461 billion), and in 2009, it rose to 3.83
trillion yuan with a 21.7 percent growth, according to the report released by
the ministry.
E-commerce growth accelerated in the first
half of this year. E-commerce transactions reached 2.25 trillion yuan between
January and June this year, said a recent report by China e-Business Research
Center.
The State Council Information Center
predicted recently the nation's e-commerce industry is expected to
"register average annual growth rate of above 35 percent in the next few
years".
Above all, we know that China is a
promising land for e-commerce businessmen home or abroad. Many Chinese
businessmen start to do cross-border e-commerce. www.chinainout.com is the first to do the
bilingual cross-border e-commerce website to help the non-sino e-commerce
businessmen enter Chinese vast potential market.
With more Chinese especially those from the
rural areas learning to shop online and exposed to the local e-commerce market,
China is likely to surpass Japan as the third largest e-commerce market
worldwide in the near future, Jiang said.
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