The Chinese Digital Economy

The Chinese Digital Economy

Author: Ma Huateng

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2021-01-25

Total Pages: 237

ISBN-13: 9813360054

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This book points out that “Internet” is the means, and the digital economy is the result. Therefore, the development of digital economy will inevitably have a profound impact on traditional enterprises and Internet enterprises and become the main way and new driving force for China's innovation and growth. The book starts with the concept of digital economy and reveals the current development of digital economy, how to improve the foundation of digital construction, and the strategies for accelerating digital transformation of various industries, the problems that need to be solved in the development of digital economy and the huge role it will play in promoting society. The book provides a clear blueprint for the government and enterprises to understand and formulate policies and development strategies in the era of digital economy.


China’s Digital Economy: Opportunities and Risks

China’s Digital Economy: Opportunities and Risks

Author: Ms.Longmei Zhang

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2019-01-17

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13: 1484389700

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China’s digital economy has expanded rapidly in recent years. While average digitalization of the economy remains lower than in advanced economies, digitalization is already high in certain regions and sectors, in particular e-commerce and fintech, and costal regions. Such transformation has boosted productivity growth, with varying impact on employment across sectors. Going forward, digitalization will continue to reshape the Chinese economy by improving efficiency, softening though not reversing, the downward trend of potential growth as the economy matures. The government should play a vital role in maximizing the benefits of digitalization while minimizing related risks, such as potential labor disruption, privacy infringement, emerging oligopolies, and financial risks.


The Digital War

The Digital War

Author: Winston Ma

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2021-01-19

Total Pages: 416

ISBN-13: 1119748917

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What new directions in China’s digital economy mean for us all China is the largest homogenous digital market on Earth: unified by language, culture, and mobile payments. Not only a consumer market of unrivaled size, it’s also a vast and hyperactive innovation ecosystem for new technologies. And as China’s digital economy moves from a consumer-focused phase to an enterprise-oriented one, Chinese companies are rushing to capitalize on ways the newer wave of tech—the Internet of Things, AI, blockchain, cloud computing, and data analytics (iABCD)—can unlock value for their businesses from non-traditional angles. In China’s Data Economy, Winston Ma—investment professional, capital markets attorney, adjunct professor of digital economy, and bestselling author—details the profound global implications of this new direction, including how Chinese apps for services such as food delivery expand so quickly they surpass their U.S. models within a couple of years, and how the sheer scale and pace of Chinese innovation might lead to an AI arms race in which China and the U.S. vie aggressively for leadership. How China’s younger netizens participate in their evolving digital economy as consumers, creators, and entrepreneurs Why Online/Office (OMO, Online-merge-with-Offline) integration is viewed as the natural next step on from the O2O (Online-to-Offline) model used in the rest of the world The ways in which traditional Chinese industries such as retail, banking, and insurance are innovating to stay in the game What emerging markets can learn from China as they leapfrog past the personal computer age altogether, diving straight into the mobile-first economy Anyone interested in what’s next for Chinese digital powerhouses—investors, governments, entrepreneurs, international business players—will find this an essential guide to what lies ahead as China’s flexes new digital muscles to create new forms of value and challenge established tech giants across the world.


Networking China

Networking China

Author: Yu Hong

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Published: 2017-01-11

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 0252099435

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In recent years, China 's leaders have taken decisive action to transform information, communications, and technology (ICT) into the nation's next pillar industry. In Networking China , Yu Hong offers an overdue examination of that burgeoning sector's political economy. Hong focuses on how the state, in conjunction with market forces and class interests, is constructing and realigning its digitalized sector. State planners intend to build a more competitive ICT sector by modernizing the network infrastructure, corporatizing media-and-entertainment institutions, and by using ICT as a crosscutting catalyst for innovation, industrial modernization, and export upgrades. The goal: to end China's industrial and technological dependence upon foreign corporations while transforming itself into a global ICT leader. The project, though bright with possibilities, unleashes implications rife with contradiction and surprise. Hong analyzes the central role of information, communications, and culture in Chinese-style capitalism. She also argues that the state and elites have failed to challenge entrenched interests or redistribute power and resources, as promised. Instead, they prioritize information, communications, and culture as technological fixes to make pragmatic tradeoffs between economic growth and social justice.


The Labor of Reinvention

The Labor of Reinvention

Author: Lin Zhang

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2023-03-07

Total Pages: 281

ISBN-13: 0231551290

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From start-up founders in the Chinese equivalent of Silicon Valley to rural villages experiencing an e-commerce boom to middle-class women reselling luxury goods, the rise of internet-based entrepreneurship has affected every part of China. For many, reinventing oneself as an entrepreneur has appeared to be an appealing way to adapt to a changing economy and society. Yet in practice, digital entrepreneurship has also reinforced traditional Chinese ideas about state power, labor, gender, and identity. Lin Zhang explores how the everyday labor of entrepreneurial reinvention is remaking China amid changing geopolitical currents. She tells the stories of people from diverse class, gender, and age backgrounds across rural, urban, and transnational settings in rich detail, providing a multifaceted and ground-level view of the twenty-first-century Chinese economy. Zhang explores the surge in digital entrepreneurialism against the backdrop of global financial crises, the U.S.-China trade war, and the COVID-19 pandemic. She argues that the rise of internet-based industries and practices has simultaneously empowered and exploited digital entrepreneurs and laborers. Despite embracing high-tech innovation, state-led entrepreneurialization does not represent a radical break with the past. It has provided a means for implementing developmental goals while retaining the importance of the traditional family and generating new inequalities. Shedding new light on global capitalism and the digital economy by centering a non-Western perspective, The Labor of Reinvention vividly conveys how the contradictions of entrepreneurialism have played out in China.


How Big is China's Digital Economy?

How Big is China's Digital Economy?

Author: Alicia Garcia Herrero

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 12

ISBN-13:

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The rise of influential Chinese digital giants, including Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent and Xiaomi has shown the world that China is a global leader in digital innovation and it is not surprising that China has started to influence the global digital market. But is China exploiting its full potential in this area? To answer this question, the authors assess how big China’s digital economy is relative to the rest of its economy, and how China performs compared to the rest of the world.


The Chinese Economy

The Chinese Economy

Author: Barry Naughton

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 545

ISBN-13: 0262640643

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The most comprehensive English-language overview of the modern Chinese economy, covering China's economic development since 1949 and post-1978 reforms--from industrial change and agricultural organization to science and technology.


Innovation of Digital Economy

Innovation of Digital Economy

Author: Jianlin Zhang

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2023-05-23

Total Pages: 474

ISBN-13: 9819917417

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This book presents a rich selection of 36 real-world cases on how organizations in China explore the new growth pattern, business model innovation, and digital transformation in digital era. The topic of cases varies from digital marketing and Internet brands, the growth of digital platforms, digital transformation and the industrial Internet of things, strategies for cross-border e-commerce companies, and business model innovation in digital era, etc. These cases stem from a diverse set of industry sectors, reporting on best practices and lessons learned. The book shows how organizations strive to find new ways to develop and create new paths to grow in a digital world and shares essential practical insights into digital economy. All cases are presented in a standardized structure in order to provide valuable insights and essential guidance for practitioners, scholars as well as general readers.


The Rise of China's Digital Economy During the Covid-19 Crisis

The Rise of China's Digital Economy During the Covid-19 Crisis

Author: Eun Kyo Cho

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Chinese government has been focusing its efforts on fostering the digital economy by emphasizing digital technologies such as artificial intelligence, cloud computing, big data and 5G.President Xi Jinping stressed the need to expand artificial intelligence and 5G technologies in response to COVID-19, noting “the proliferation of COVID-19 is a challenge and opportunity for industrial development.”According to the China Institute of Information and Communication, China's digital economy accounted for about 34.8 percent of its gross domestic product, at 31.3 trillion CNY as of 2018. In addition, from 2016 to 2018, China's digital economy continued to grow at a rate of more than 20 percent per annum for three years. In addition, the Chinese digital ecosystem is expected to further expand as various nonface-to-face business models such as digital healthcare, digital education, and telecommuting grow due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper aims to identify the development trends in China's digital economy since the outbreak of the pandemic and analyze the Chinese government's support policies and new business models in the digital service sector and present the implications carried by the results of the analysis. This study will also propose new cooperation measures between Korea and China.


Digital China's Informal Circuits

Digital China's Informal Circuits

Author: Elaine Jing Zhao

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-02-11

Total Pages: 150

ISBN-13: 1351701886

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From open source cultures, piracy, to amateur media and on-demand labour, informal media activities are vibrant in circuits of cultural production, distribution, consumption and labour utilisation in China. They come in different sizes and shapes, involve multiple actors, often with transnational ties and tensions, and challenge polemic views. Why do these informal activities occur, and how do they evolve? What cultural and social consequences do they have? In what ways do they pose challenges to governance and provoke us to rethink the notion? This book engages with diverse forms of the informal and their equally diverse interactions with the formal in the broader context of the rise of digital platforms, the contingent and complicated state–market interactions, and evolving roles of users. The book provides a vivid and original account of how digital platforms navigate formal and informal boundaries at both operational and discursive levels; how enthusiastic fans, aspiring amateurs, 'ordinary' users and necessity-driven labourers become integral to the formal/informal interface; and how state and non-state actors intervene in governing the formal/informal dynamics. In doing so, the book opens up new insights into the ongoing digital transformation in China.