Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCalvin Anderson Modified over 9 years ago
1
E-Commerce In China Liang Chen & Xu Li
2
Definition of E-Commerce 1. Too Generalized Definition 2. Too Restrictive Definition 3. Definition in between
3
Reasons of E-Commerce Development 1. Development of IT Industry in China 2. China’s Entry into WTO
4
IT Industry In China 20% GDP in 1998 Fuel current economic growth Set solid foundation for development of E-C
5
China’s WTO Entry 1.Its commitment to liberalization in the telecommunication and financial service sectors 2.Open market to foreign investment 3.Create competitive environment
6
Two Models B2B(earlier development) B2C(wide range of goods)
7
Two Aspects 1.Avoid the overly aggressive investment 2.Be prepared to follow the wave
8
Development Prerequisites Online Population (103 million by 2005 up from 87m in 2003) Estimated 7m credit card holders in China The population of PC users Information Structure (ISP cost & service quality)
9
Development in E-commerce 1. In March 6, 1998, first online sale 2. In the early 1990s, adoption of EDI 3. Golden Bridge & Golden Card Project 4. (Infant Stage) 1999-2001 5. Robust development in 2005
10
Statistics 1. Value of online transaction 350 bn in 2004 to 553 bn in 2005 2. 95% of the market was B2B 3. Up 37.1% year-on-year 4. Number of items online exceeds 60m
11
Limitations E-commerce in its infancy stage Transactions representing 0.87% of GDP
12
Constraints High internet access cost Lack of a nationwide credit card system Slow and uncertainty delivery Lax network security Government interference
13
Low speed and high cost online access Service charges for renting frequency bands of sufficient width for websites high Access charges high: 10% of monthly income
14
Payment online The share of online payments remaining below 50% Banking services expensive and inefficient Banks imposing restrictions on e-payments Average fees equal to 5%--10% of each credit-card transaction
15
Problems in the realm of supply and delivery system Traditional labor-intensive delivery system Weak logistic system
16
Online security Companies’ worrying about the e-business system from hackers Commercial credibility: counterfeit and low- quality products Figures: 20%, 40%, 80%
17
Government interference Censorship Strict control of internet
18
Government ’ s Role 1. Provide more efficient high-level guidance 2. Create a better environment 3. Issue appropriate laws and regulations
19
Resolutions of Chinese Government inter-departmental responsibility coordination should be emphasized Strengthen the capital support policy Relax constraints Continue its reform of intellectual property right
20
References China's E-Commerce Development,Jiacheng HE,perspectives, Vol. 2, No. 2 China's E-Commerce Developmentperspectives, Vol. 2, No. 2 E-Commerce In China, John WONG & NAH Seok Ling E-Commerce In China Is E-Commerce ready for China? By Keith Regan,E-Commerce Times, Is E-Commerce ready for China? China E-Commerce 2000 conferenceChina E-Commerce 2000 conference http://www.ultrachina http://www.ultrachina http://www.scmp.com(South china Morning Post) http://www.scmp.com(South http://www.ecommercetimes.com http://www.ecommercetimes.com www.sina.com www.sina.com www.yahoo.com www.yahoo.com www.alibaba.com
21
Thank you 谢谢!
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.