Europe warns giant e-tailer to stop cheating consumers


Europe warns giant e-tailer to stop cheating consumers

No, not Amazon. China's SHEIN is in the spotlight for fake discounts, grubby greenery, and evading inquiries

The European Commission has warned Chinese e-tailer SHEIN to clean up its act, after finding several practices on its website breach local consumer law.

The Commission and Europe's Consumer Protection Cooperation (CPC), a network of national consumer authorities, on Monday warned the e-tailer that an investigation found the following breaches of EU law on SHEN's website:

The regulator also asked SHEIN to provide info on how it complies with other legal obligations, including how it ensures that product rankings, reviews, and ratings are not presented in a misleading manner. Another item of concern is whether SHEIN properly informs shoppers about contracts with third-party sellers on the Chinese company's platform.

The CPC gave SHEIN a month to respond to its findings and explain how it proposes to respond to the regulator's findings. If the Chinese company fails to do so, it faces fines and punishment by regulators in different EU member nations.

The EU's concerns are another worry for SHEIN, which is already impacted by the USA's decision to impose significant tariffs on imports from China and to end the de minimis rule that saw packages valued at under $800 exempted from import duties. SHEIN specializes in cheap and cheerful items, usually sold for much less than $800.

SHEIN has faced criticism over the low quality of its products, human rights abuses by its suppliers, and the environmental impact of the "fast fashion" business model it shares with many other online and real-world retailers.

In 2023 a group called "Shut Down SHEIN" - which registered its domain name anonymously and described itself as "a growing coalition of like-minded individuals and businesses" but did not identify its members -called for the US government to act against the Chinese company to protect local American retailers.

Europe and the USA enforcing and tightening regulations on a foreign entity is essentially government-as-usual.

Beijing, however, sees SHEIN and its fellow e-tailer Temu as exceptional: In 2024 China's Ministry of Commerce published a strategy that identified cross-border e-commerce as an important contributor to economic development and worthy of government and private sector support to assist its global expansion.

Such support makes sense because China's economy is reliant on manufacturing exports. SHEIN did its bit to support exports by winning an estimated $38 billion of revenue last year.

Monday's warning from the EU means that one of the companies Beijing hoped would generate export revenue and enhance its soft power now faces challenges in the world's two biggest consumer markets. ®

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