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Gov't mulls new regulations for online stores

0 CommentsPrint E-mail China Daily, February 12, 2010
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While online shopping has become increasingly popular among the Chinese, the government is mulling further regulations for online stores.

The State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) is expected to publish new regulations on C2C (consumer-to-consumer) online trading next month, media has reported.

The reports said major C2C sellers will have to register for a business license and pay taxes, while small-level sellers will not be required to do so.

New year purchases on Taobao are expected to rise from 280 million yuan in 2009 to 1 billion yuan this year.

New year purchases on Taobao are expected to rise from 280 million yuan in 2009 to 1 billion yuan this year.

Administration officials said late last month that a regulation for online trading services is under "research and analysis". They would not give further details.

The expected tightened management has stirred speculation and discussion among online sellers.

"I've heard about the new rule. At least 50 percent of online stores will close if the government levies taxes on them," says Hu Chao, a C2C online store owner.

The number of online shoppers reached 108 million in 2009, up 45.9 percent year-on-year, according to figures from the China Internet Network Information Center released on Jan 15.

The volume of China's online business market reached 268 billion yuan ($39 billion) in 2009, and is expected to total 464 billion yuan this year, according to the latest research results from the China IntelliConsulting Corporation.

But some B2C (business-to-consumer) online storeowners do not have such worries, and, in fact, welcome the regulations. According to Han Jun, president of a popular B2C company named Yihaodian, more government intervention will help build fair competition and help stop counterfeit products from being sold online.

SAIC began to work on the regulation last July. The regulation is not only directed against C2C online stores. According to media reports, several firms that sell their goods on the Internet have received a copy of the draft, and have submitted their feedback to the SAIC.

"I don't think the government will directly levy tax on individual C2C sellers. They will fix different policies for different groups," said Zhang Yanping, senior analyst of the iRearch Consulting Group, a professional organization specializing in the Internet.

Generally speaking, online sellers are divided into two groups: business sellers and consumer sellers.

Business sellers are generally well-established companies, which are already obliged to register for a business license and pay taxes.

But consumer sellers are different. Usually only one or two people run an online store. They often operate their store on online-shopping websites, such as taobao.com, and neither have a license nor pay taxes.

Of all the online stores in China, 86.2 percent are consumer sellers, according to research results of the iRearch Consulting Group.

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