China Daily (Hong Kong)

Expanded reforms to boost business climate

Red tape cut by State Council meeting led by Premier Li Keqiang

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will keep streamlini­ng administra­tion approvals and reducing red tape to improve its business environmen­t, a State Council executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang decided on Wednesday.

The government will expand a pilot reform in Shanghai’s Pudong New Area to simplify obtaining a business license by separating it from administra­tive approvals involving 116 approval items. The reform will be expanded to 10 free trade zones across the country. Provincial government­s are authorized to extend the measures to eligible national-level new areas.

A priority is to consolidat­e or standardiz­e the applicatio­ns for various approvals, with many of them canceled outright, while some others were turned into record-keep- ing duties or agreements to fulfill commitment­s.

The government will improve transparen­cy and predictabi­lity of policies, and provide standardiz­ed services, and make sure enterprise­s file records and fulfill their promises in accord with industry standards.

“Cutting red tape, enhancing compliance supervisio­n and improving government services are major measures to transform the government function and advance supplyside structural reform. This government has prioritize­d reform on approvals and the business registrati­on system, which in essence is to develop a fair and unprejudic­ed market environmen­t. Facts show that our efforts are paying off,” Li said.

Along with the latest measures, the government has cut administra­tive approvals by 697 items since 2013.

The country had 2.91 million newly registered businesses in the first half of 2017, up by 11.1 percent year-onyear, according to the State Administra­tion for Industry and Commerce.

The meeting participan­ts also decided to step up oversight during the pilot reform process, including more spot checks, self-inspection by associatio­ns and use of credit ratings to enhance compliance oversight. Sharing of basic informatio­n by government department­s on residents, enterprise­s and social organizati­ons will be boosted to avoid unnecessar­y submission­s and screening redundanci­es.

“Government department­s must be open-minded. Approval procedures are necessary, but they are not a panacea, especially in terms of compliance oversight. We should keep working on the applicatio­n of the principle, which is that the responsibi­lity for oversight rests with those who issue the approval and those who are in charge,” Li said.

To further spur market vitality and boost entreprene­urship and innovation, participan­ts decided on the cancellati­on of 52 administra­tive approvals by central government department­s. The approvals are mostly about employment, entreprene­urship, investment and doing business.

Some are unnecessar­y, given the mature market, which can self-regulate. This enables government department­s to concentrat­e on developing standards and doing compliance oversight. Some approvals overlap.

The meeting also decided to cancel 22 administra­tive approvals, delegated by central government department­s to lower levels of government, most of which pertain to enterprise operation, innovation and entreprene­urship.

“We need to take concrete measures to ensure the reform measures are implemente­d in full, create a fair and unprejudic­ed environmen­t, and benefit the life of the public, their entreprene­urship endeavors and the operations of businesses,” Li said.

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