Internet platform pricing rules benefit merchants and consumers
By LI YANG | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-12-22 07:58
The release of rules on the pricing practices of internet platforms marks a timely and necessary step to refine China's digital governance framework and foster the sound development of the platform economy. Jointly issued by the National Development and Reform Commission, the State Administration for Market Regulation and the Cyberspace Administration of China on Dec 9, the rules respond directly to longstanding concerns over opaque pricing, disorderly competition and the erosion of consumer and merchant rights in the fast-growing online marketplace.
At their core, the rules aim to strike a balance between encouraging innovation and ensuring fairness. By providing clearer behavioral guidance for platform operators and merchants, they help establish a transparent, predictable and lawbased pricing environment. Such clarity is essential for the healthy growth of both e-commerce and the internet platforms, which now play a key role in China's domestic circulation and consumption-driven growth strategy.
One of the most notable moves is the strengthened protection of merchants' independent pricing rights. Explicit prohibitions against platforms imposing unreasonable restrictions — such as limiting traffic, blocking stores or removing goods to coerce pricing decisions — help correct power imbalances between the internet platforms and businesses operating on them. This not only safeguards fair competition but also allows merchants, especially small and medium-sized enterprises, to price products based on cost, quality and market demand rather than platform pressure.
Equally important is the enhanced protection of consumers' legitimate rights and interests. The rules require clearer price labeling and greater transparency in promotions, subsidies, dynamic pricing and differentiated pricing mechanisms. Consumers are entitled to know how discounts are calculated, what conditions apply to coupons or advance payments, and how platform subsidies actually work. By regulating practices such as password-free payments, automatic renewals and unsolicited deductions, the rules reinforce consumers' rights to information and choice, reducing hidden traps that undermine trust and willingness to spend.
These measures are particularly relevant in the broader context of China's campaign against "involution-style" competition. In recent years, aggressive price wars in sectors such as new energy vehicles and food delivery have illustrated how cutthroat discounting can distort price signals, squeeze profits and ultimately weaken consumption power. Such competition depresses wages, erodes R&D investment and damages long-term industrial vitality. The new rules address similar risks in the platform economy by clarifying standards for identifying predatory pricing, price discrimination, price fraud and price collusion.
By prohibiting platforms from forcing merchants to sell below cost, the rules align with the anti-unfair competition law's anti-involution principles while still allowing reasonable exemptions for innovative business models that offer free services and enhance long-term welfare. This nuanced approach avoids a one-size-fits-all crackdown and instead guides competition toward quality, efficiency and innovation.
From a macroeconomic perspective, orderly pricing behavior is indispensable for expanding domestic demand. Fair competition and transparent pricing help stabilize expectations for both businesses and consumers. When enterprises are no longer trapped in destructive price wars, they can invest more in product quality, service improvement and technological upgrading. When consumers trust prices and feel their rights are protected, their willingness to consume naturally increases. Together, these dynamics support a virtuous cycle of consumption upgrading and high-quality growth.
The consultative process behind the rules also reflects improved governance. Public opinions were widely solicited, and feedback from enterprises, consumers, experts and local governments was carefully incorporated. This has not only enhanced the rules' practicality and pertinence but also strengthened market confidence in policy consistency and fairness.
With the rules set to take effect on April 10 next year, the transitional period for self-inspection and system adjustment is both prudent and practical. But effective implementation, supported by interdepartmental coordination and industry self-regulation, will be key to translating regulatory intent into real market improvements.
In an economy where internet platforms are deeply embedded in everyday consumption, regulating pricing behavior is not about restraining growth but about guiding it onto a healthier track. By curbing involution-style competition, protecting consumers and merchants, and fostering a fair and transparent market environment, the new rules lay a solid foundation for boosting domestic consumption and promoting the sustainable development of China's platform economy.





















