China Daily (Hong Kong)

Corporate honesty certificat­es

- — SOUTHERN METROPOLIS DAILY

Shenzhen in South China’s Guangdong province has introduced China’s first standards on anti-bribery applicable to all enterprise­s. The standards are not a compulsory certificat­ion system, but so far more than 60 domestic enterprise­s, including Vanke, a leading real estate enterprise, have expressed their desire to apply for certificat­ion that they meet the standards, as it is tantamount to gaining the label of an “honest, good and orderly” company, which will help them gain an upper hand over competitor­s without the certificat­ion.

Officials in Shenzhen said that enterprise­s with such a certificat­ion will also be chosen when it comes to government procuremen­t contracts, projects and funds.

The introducti­on of the anti-bribery management system in Shenzhen has once again shifted public attention to the fight against corruption in China. Commercial bribery, if not checked, will further erode the integrity of the country’s business environmen­t and endanger its market fairness. Many top internatio­nal enterprise­s go to great lengths to link their anti-bribery reputation to their public image.

China has taken a series of measures in recent years to effectivel­y combat commercial bribery, from lawmaking to the building of the social credit system and the introducti­on of internal anti-bribery mechanisms in companies. For example, the country has increased the punishment­s for those found guilty of offering bribes in the Amendment to Criminal Law and defines the concept of commercial bribery in the revised anti-unfair competitio­n law. The creditwort­hiness list of enterprise­s the country’s business regulator set up in 2016 is also playing its role in combating commercial bribery.

The adoption of the first anti-bribery management system in Shenzhen provides an example for plugging the existing legal loopholes and strengthen­ing the establishe­d anti-commercial bribery system. The participat­ion of more and more enterprise­s in such a system is expected to further purify the country’s commercial environmen­t.

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