China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stop gifting from grafting

- EDITORIALS

THE BAN IMPOSED BY THE TOP ANTI- GRAFT watchdog of the Communist Party of China on the use of public money to buy moon cakes as a gift nearly a month before the annual Mid-Autumn Festival once again demonstrat­es the new leadership’s resolve to fight extravagan­ce and promote frugality.

According to the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the ban aims to put a resolute brake on “presenting gifts and extravagan­ce funded by public money”.

The new CPC leadership has taken a firm stance against the squanderin­g of public money and taken steps to stop extravagan­ce in a bid to forge a clean and thrifty image. The antiextrav­agance campaign, which has resulted in a sharp decline in sales of expensive commoditie­s, such as Moutai liquor, has seen positive effects throughout society.

A high-profile battle against the seemingly less expensive moon cakes shows the watchdog is persisting in its fight against extravagan­ce and determinat­ion to leave no space for corruption.

The annual Mid-Autumn Festival offers an opportunit­y for Chinese people to reunite with family members and friends, and moon cakes are usually given as a gift. They are also given as a sign of respect in business and to build personal relations. Such a practice constitute­s an important part of the Chinese “moon cake culture” and remains popular.

However, as people have become wealthier, low-priced but palatable moon cakes have increasing­ly given way to expensive and extravagan­tly packaged moon cakes, especially by officials as a gift for their superiors, mostly at the expense of public money.

In such an atmosphere, moon cakes at astronomic­al prices and even gold and silver “moon cakes” have emerged. This has obviously provided space for corruption. On the eve of the annual Mid-Autumn Festival, it was common for the gates of some government department­s in Beijing to be busy with vehicles bearing moon cakes, adding even more traffic to the alreadycon­gested capital.

The unhealthy gift-presenting that has been rife in officialdo­m has eaten up huge amounts of taxpayers’ money and incurred the wrath of the public.

The latest ban from the top Party watchdog will help curb the gift-giving culture and rein in the skewed morals exhibited by officials.

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