Report: China’s digital edge export-worthy
China is in a strong position to export its internet financial services and standards to economies along the Belt and Road Initiative, as the country maintains an "obvious" edge in the booming sector, a key report said on Thursday.

A staff member demonstrates mobile-payment process at Alipay's headquarters in Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province, Jan. 10, 2014. [Photo/Xinhua]
The Report on Internet Finance 2017, released at the Boao
Forum for Asia, said China has accumulated abundant experience in mobile
payments and online fund-raising, which can help other economies develop
internet finance services.
"Other economies can learn from China's experience in
leveraging cutting-edge technologies to boost financial efficiency and
strengthen risk control. The move will help boost the integration of global
financial sources," it added.
The report comes amid explosive growth in China's internet
finance sector. It said dynamic initiatives such as mobile payments,
peer-to-peer lending, online insurance and others were emerging all the time and
were rapidly changing people's lives.
As of October 2016, the Chinese mainland had about 1,850
peer-to-peer lending online platforms, with total transactions in the first 10
months of last year exceeding 1.59 trillion yuan ($232 billion), data from the
report showed.
It said Chinese players such as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd
and Tencent Holdings Ltd were aggressively extending their financial presence to
South Korea, Japan and other overseas markets.
"With the internationalization of payment systems as an
initial move, more and more Chinese internet financial companies will go out on
the hunt for equity investments and acquisitions, to set up their global
branches," said Hu Bin, deputy director of the Institute of Finance and Banking
at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
He said that the Belt and Road Initiative will encourage
China to build new trade and investment ties with multiple economies, which will
offer a great opportunity for the overseas expansion of internet financial
companies.
But the report said things needed to be learned in the
expansion of business abroad.
"It is of crucial importance to partner with local
financial service providers. Only by respecting local culture and policies can
Chinese players thrive in foreign countries," the report added.
The report said internet finance should be inclusive and
focus more on promoting the development of the real economy, as cutting-edge
technologies lowered operating costs and boosted efficiency.
"More efforts are needed to regulate the burgeoning sector
as services become increasingly decentralized," it added.
In addition to financial regulators, it proposed that
information management agencies, public security bureaus-and other related
government agencies-should get involved to improve regulation.
(China.org.cn)
