Taobao villages (simplified Chinese: 淘宝村; traditional Chinese: 淘寶村; pinyin: Táobǎo cūn) are rural Chinese villages where the local economy has developed to focus extensively on e-commerce via the Taobao online retail platform. Taobao villages have contributed to economic development and rural revitalization in China.
Definition
editTaobao villages are rural Chinese villages where the local economy has developed to focus extensively on e-commerce via the Taobao platform.[1]: 112 Alibaba's research division defines Taobao villages as those in which (1) businesses are located in an administrative village in a rural area, (2) the village's annual e-commerce revenues exceed RMB 10 million, and (3) the village has either an excess of 100 active online shops or active online shops account for more than 10% of village households.[1]: 112
Overview
editTaobao villages are concentrated in China's coastal regions, particularly in Zhejiang province (which is where Alibaba, which operated the Taobao platform, is located).[1]: 112 Zhijiang City in Hubei province also has a significant cluster of Taobao villages.[2]: 279 As of at least 2023, Taobao villages are increasingly developed in inland parts of China.[1]: 112
Taobao villages first began appearing in 2009.[2]: 278 By 2013, twenty Taobao villages existed in China.[1]: 112 In 2020, 5,425 such villages existed, generating total annual revenue of RMB 1,000 billion via 29,600 active online shops.[1]: 112
Impact
editThe geographical clustering of e-commerce businesses in Taobao villages have mutual benefits for these businesses, as opposed to when they operate in greater isolation.[3]: 180 Geographic clustering of e-commerce businesses facilitates knowledge exchange and allows for increased labor market pooling.[3]: 180–181 Increased economic activities also can attract government-subsidized capital.[3]: 185
Because Taobao villages have increased the incomes or rural people and entrepreneurship in rural China, Taobao villages have become a component of rural revitalization strategies.[2]: 278
The spontaneous development of Taobao Villages inspired the Rural Taobao program, a rural e-commerce project undertaken by the Chinese government and Alibaba.[4]: 129–130 This program aimed to provide rural households with the same level of access to consumer goods that urban residents have and to facilitate the sale of agricultural goods through e-commerce.[4]: 129 As of 2017, the program covered 16,500 villages.[4]: 130
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f Hu, Richard (2023). Reinventing the Chinese City. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-21101-7.
- ^ a b c Yang, Saidi; Wang, Puqing; Zhou, Deyi (2021). "Transformation and Development of Taobao Village in China Based on "Zhijiang Mode"". Proceedings of the 2020 3rd International Seminar on Education Research and Social Science (ISERSS 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press. doi:10.2991/assehr.k.210120.053. ISBN 978-94-6239-316-5.
- ^ a b c Guihang, Guo; Qian, Liang; Guangfan, Luo (2014-05-23). "Effects of Clusters on China's E-Commerce: Evidence from the Junpu Taobao Village". International Journal of Business and Management. 9 (6). doi:10.5539/ijbm.v9n6p180. ISSN 1833-8119.
- ^ a b c Liu, Lizhi (2024). From Click to Boom: The Political Economy of E-Commerce in China. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691254104.