Amazon recruits more Chinese sellers and puts consumers at risk
The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the rising number of Chinese sellers on Amazon and the problems they make
The percentage of China-based sellers directly supplying products on Amazon has risen to 38% from 25% three years ago, according to The Wall Street Journal analysis of the 10,000 most-reviewed accounts.
That increase has been accompanied by more problems. More than half of the problematic items sold on Amazon uncovered earlier by the Wall Street Journal—including items banned or declared unsafe by the government, or deceptively labeled—came from these Chinese accounts.
The move by Amazon makes commercial sense, writes The Information. Cutting out a lot of the U.S.-based middlemen means both higher margins for the Chinese sellers and lower prices for consumers. But enforcing quality and safety issues with companies based in China is much harder.
More Amazon news
Google introduces Cloud Retail Search
Google introduces a new search tool for retailers With Retail Search, retailers can bring "Google-quality" search capabilities to their own digital platforms. This week Google announced Google Cloud Retail Search, a new tool to help retailers improve the product...
Live shopping is the new trend in online retail
European customers are open to live shopping Live shopping is one of the big e-commerce trends in 2021, writes e-commerce-magazin.de. This format has already become the standard for online shopping in China. Chinese influencers take customers on a shopping tour via...
Influencers are the key to Generation Z’s heart
Influencers are the way to reach and engage Gen-Z shoppers Generation Z accounts for more than 40 percent of consumers in the U.S. With a collective annual spending power estimated at $143 billion, this group is projected to be the largest consumer population in the...