TheLowDown-Asia 07月16日 17:06
How does Beijing really see China’s quick commerce subsidy war?
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文章探讨了中国政府对外卖和即时零售行业激烈补贴竞争的态度。通过分析《人民日报》的两篇评论文章,揭示了官方对此复杂现象的看法。文章指出,一方面,政府欢迎补贴带来的消费刺激、就业增长和小微企业复苏;另一方面,也强调可持续发展和创新是长期战略的关键。这种双轨制的信息传递方式,反映了政府在管理公众舆论和市场预期方面的策略。文章认为,在经历了多年的监管审查后,中国科技平台在推出大规模补贴活动前,已仔细衡量了政策导向。

🔥 外卖和即时零售领域的竞争在2025年7月加剧,补贴战导致了订单量的激增。

📰 《人民日报》发表了两篇看似矛盾的评论文章,反映了官方对补贴战的复杂态度。

🧐 第一篇文章警告了不可持续的竞争,强调创新才是未来;第二篇文章则肯定了补贴带来的短期经济效益,如消费刺激和就业增长。

✍️ 这两篇文章分别代表了《人民日报》评论部和经济社会事务部的观点,反映了不同的侧重点。

💡 文章认为,这种看似矛盾的信息传递是政府管理公众舆论和市场预期的策略,旨在平衡短期利益与长期发展。

One question we’ve been asked repeatedly: How does the Chinese government view the subsidy-fueled war in food delivery and quick commerce?

The battle intensified in July, just as temperatures in many Chinese cities soared past 40°C. Meituan reported that on Saturday, 13 July, it fulfilled over 150 million quick commerce and food delivery orders, with an average delivery time of 34 minutes. Taobao, meanwhile, claimed more than 80 million on-demand orders on 6 July.

These staggering numbers came with a cost: hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies were poured in to boost order volume. The contest is now a high-stakes game of “who will blink first”—though we haven’t yet seen a Trump-style TACO moment.

One question many asked us is: how does the Chinese government view this intensive subsidy war

Two voices from one Party Mouthpiece

Last week, People’s Daily—the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party—published two seemingly conflicting commentaries on this very topic.

As the Party’s central mouthpiece, People’s Daily commentaries are closely watched, often interpreted as signals of policy direction or internal consensus.

The first article, published on 9 July 2025 under the byline 筋斗云 (Cloud Somersault), was titled: “The Food Delivery Wars” – No Winners in Price Wars, Only Innovation Leads to the Future.

The piece delivered a sharp warning about unsustainable competition:

“A price war with no bottom line is ultimately nothing more than a brutal game of market capture. Almost every round of cash-burning competition ends with price hikes—there’s no such thing as a free lunch.
Internet companies, born with innovation in their DNA, should broaden their horizons and aim for higher, long-term goals.”

The second article, published on 11 July 2025 under the byline 知微 (the subtle observer), struck a notably different tone. 

Titled:“People’s Daily Financial Review: More Delivery Orders, Booming Business for Small Shops”, it painted the subsidy-driven surge in a much more positive light:

“Platform investment serves as a key lever for unlocking consumer potential. Initiatives such as consumption vouchers by platforms like Taobao InstaShopping and Meituan not only offer tangible benefits to consumers, but also ignite enthusiasm for spending. At the same time, delivery riders see an increase in both order volume and income, bringing a genuine sense of livelihood improvement.
The biggest beneficiaries, however, are small and medium-sized merchants. Brick-and-mortar restaurants, mom-and-pop stores, and convenience shops have leveraged these platforms to expand their customer reach. The resulting order growth translates into direct revenue gains, without incurring additional costs—creating room for long-term growth.”

Who are the authors behind these bylines? 

To interpret these two perspectives, we must understand where they come from.

Both are authoritative within the People’s Daily system. Neither would publish without alignment with broader messaging intent.

A mixed message, or a coordinated one?

So—do these seemingly opposing commentaries signal that Beijing hasn’t made up its mind?

Not necessarily.

A more likely explanation: this is coordinated two-track messaging, which the Party has long practised in managing public opinion and market expectations. 

In this case:

Reading the room in 2025

After years of intense regulatory scrutiny, Chinese tech platforms would not launch aggressive subsidy campaigns unless they had taken the policy temperature carefully. The fact that both commentaries were published within days of each other suggests not confusion, but more likely intentional balance.

In short: the state welcomes the results, but expects more than just burning money.

The post How does Beijing really see China’s quick commerce subsidy war? first appeared on The Low Down - Momentum Works.

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外卖 即时零售 补贴战 中国政府 人民日报
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