Shanghai expands scope of virtual asset trading to become a ‘data industry innovation highland’ worth US$69 billion by 2025 | South China Morning Post
China is trying to apply commercial rules to create a market for data, which is regarded by Beijing as a new production factor, in the same category as land, capital, human labour and technology.
These exchanges are expected to address thorny issues such as how to classify, set a price and trade valuable data made available by companies.
In May, the state-backed Guiyang Global Big Data Exchange – the country’s first data exchange that began operations as early as 2015 – facilitated the country’s first sale of personal data, according to the provincial government of Guizhou in southwest China.
Meanwhile in Shanghai, “all kinds of entities” are encouraged to buy data products through the city’s data exchange, according to the municipal government. It indicated that those which meet certain conditions can be entitled to tax deduction for their research and development expenses.
By 2025, the total scale of Shanghai’s computing power network will “quadruple from the end of the 13th Five-Year Plan”, which concluded in 2020, according to the municipal government.