Companies including Shein, PDD Holdings' Temu and Alibaba's
AliExpress, which predominantly ship made-in-China products
"cross border" to markets around the world have been rapidly
growing in recent years.
This has opened a new avenue for growth for some firms
previously focused on domestic consumption, which remains muted
by a macroeconomic slowdown, prolonged property crisis and
income insecurity.
The commerce ministry's announcement, which covered draft rules
for both inbound cross-border e-commerce as well as outbound,
said it would also seek to improve cross-border data management
and optimise the supervision of cross-border exports.
National ministries and government departments will smooth
financing channels and help cross-border e-commerce companies to
"go global", the ministry said.
(Reporting by Albee Zhang and Casey Hall; Editing by Andrew
Heavens and Miral Fahmy)
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