前三季中国电子商务持续健康发展 全国网上零售额增长9.8%
Chang Jiang Shang Bao·2025-10-27 01:52

Core Insights - China's e-commerce sector is experiencing sustained healthy growth, contributing to domestic demand expansion, transformation, and cooperation, thereby aiding the construction of a unified national market [1] Group 1: E-commerce Growth - In the first three quarters of 2025, China's online retail sales increased by 9.8%, with physical goods online retail sales reaching 91,528 billion yuan, growing by 6.5% [1] - The share of physical goods online retail sales accounted for 25.0% of total social retail sales, with food, clothing, and daily necessities growing by 15.1%, 2.8%, and 5.7% respectively [1] - Digital products, online services, and instant e-commerce showed significant growth, with sales increasing by 8.3%, 20.2%, and 24.3% respectively [1] Group 2: Agricultural E-commerce - The "Digital Commerce Promotes Agriculture" initiative is enhancing the digital transformation of agriculture in regions like Guangxi, Sichuan, Ningxia, and Shandong, with agricultural online retail sales growing by 9.6% [2] - Over 350 industry e-commerce matching events were conducted by various commerce departments, with electronic products and textiles e-commerce transaction volumes increasing by 8.7% and 5.2% respectively [2] Group 3: Cross-border E-commerce - Cross-border e-commerce imports and exports grew by 6.4% in the first three quarters of 2025, with total cross-border e-commerce reaching approximately 1.32 trillion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 5.7% [3] - Exports accounted for about 1.03 trillion yuan, growing by 4.7%, while imports reached approximately 291.1 billion yuan, increasing by 9.3% [3] - Chinese sellers on platforms like Amazon are expanding globally, with sales in global markets increasing by over 20% year-on-year [3] Group 4: Regulatory Environment - The year 2025 marks the beginning of stringent regulations in the e-commerce sector, including cross-border tax transparency and strict penalties for data violations [4] - Major platforms like Amazon and OZON will start submitting seller data to Chinese tax authorities, leading to increased operational transparency for cross-border sellers [4] - While initial compliance may raise costs for some businesses, the long-term outlook suggests a shift towards high-quality development in the industry [4]