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China e-commerce hub Zhejiang issues live-streaming quality control guidelines amid consumer rights backlash

  • The guidelines were released to ‘reduce the risks of live-stream e-commerce sourcing’ and to improve general industry standards
  • Regional governments and business associations have had to deal with rising complaints about false advertising, poor product quality

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E-commerce livesreamer Huang Wei, also known as Viya, speaks during the Boao Forum for Asia in south China’s Hainan province, in April 2021. Photo: AFP

Chinese e-commerce hub Zhejiang has released guidelines for live-streamers to further tighten screening of suppliers and products sold via the popular sales channel, amid a government crackdown on faulty goods and tax evasion.

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The guidelines were released on Monday to “reduce the risks of live-stream e-commerce sourcing in general and to improve standards across the entire industry,” the Zhejiang Daily reported, citing the Zhejiang E-Commerce Association.

According to the new guidelines, live-stream companies should be equipped with dedicated quality management personnel, who are expected to review supplier qualifications, product qualifications and product samples, with an additional review before live-streams.

The development comes after Beijing vowed to increase scrutiny of consumer rights abuses in the live-streaming industry, which surged amid the pandemic as more people moved from offline to online shopping.

The market value of live-stream e-commerce more than doubled in size to 961 billion yuan (US$151 billion) in 2020, according to iiMedia Research, and it is expected to grow to 1.65 trillion yuan in 2023.

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So far, Alibaba Group Holding’s Taobao, TikTok’s domestic sister app Douyin, short-video platform Kuaishou and lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu all are players in the sector, while Tencent Holdings’ WeChat video feature Channels is looking to tap more revenue in the field. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.
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