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People walk towards the Alibaba Group Holdings headquarters in Hangzhou, China, on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. Photo: Bloomberg

China antitrust: Alibaba promises to assist regulators to maintain ‘market order’ after record fine

  • Alibaba’s pledge was one of 11 released on Friday by tech firms such as video streaming site iQiyi, search engine Sogou and food delivery platform Ele.me
  • The company said separately that trial programme for merchants on its Tmall platform would begin on April 19
Alibaba

Alibaba Group Holding, the internet behemoth hit with a record US$2.8 billion fine from China’s antitrust authorities, has publicly promised to obey antitrust rules and to assist regulators in maintaining “market order”.

Alibaba, the parent company of the South China Morning Post, promised in a public statement that it would not take measures to force merchants to “pick one from two” – the misconduct it was accused of under China’s anti-monopoly law – and would not restrict market competition behaviour using technology means such as data and algorithms.

The company also promised to strengthen food safety and product quality management, improve intellectual property protection, and refrain from “illegal collection or abuse of consumer personal information”.

“We sincerely accept supervision from the competent authorities, the public and the media,” the company said in a statement on Friday.

China antitrust: Alibaba’s home province vows to ‘supervise and guide’ the e-commerce giant to rectify violations

The Hangzhou-based e-commerce giant also said it would “continuously lower the threshold for small businesses” to sell goods on its platforms.

The company said in a separate press release that a “trial period” programme for merchants on its Tmall platform would begin on April 19. The programme is aimed at making it easier for merchants to sell on the platform. For example, setting up a new store on its popular site Taobao will only take five minutes, the company said.

The public statement was one of 11 released on Friday by technology firms that included video streaming service iQiyi, search engine Sogou and food delivery platform Ele.me (also owned by Alibaba). In the statements, the companies disclosed their commitment to do business in compliance with the law, according to a statement issued by the State Administration For Market Regulation (SAMR) on Friday. 

The latest moves come after the first two groups of tech firms, including Tencent Holdings, JD.com and Meituan, released similar statements earlier this week after SAMR, the China Cyberspace Administration, and the nation’s Taxation Administration, urged 34 of the country’s largest technology companies to learn from Alibaba’s case and to conduct self-inspections in the coming month.

iQiyi, for instance, made nine promises in its statement. The Netflix-like video site said it would “treat all operators on the platform fairly” and “not use services agreements or technology means to restrict their operation”. The company also said it will “never abuse its market dominance position or participate in unfair competition”.

Beijing’s targeting of the country’s key internet platforms, which included Kuaishou, Bilibili and Didi Chuxing, and the subsequent compliance from Big Tech which has a combined market capitalisation of at least US$2.7 trillion, comes at a time when the Chinese government is trying to use antitrust laws and other regulatory approaches to contain “disorderly” expansion of the economy and society.

China’s regulatorshave lectured Big Tech on misconduct such as forcing merchants to pick one platform, abusing dominant market positions, making hostile bids to acquire top players in specific market segments, misusing big data to charge unfair pricing to certain clients, turning a blind eye to inferior quality products, leaking customer data, as well as evading tax payments.


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