China Daily (Hong Kong)

Council cuts red tape for businesses

Measures approved to streamline administra­tion, reduce burdens

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will work to better the business environmen­t with measures that further streamline administra­tion and reduce corporate burdens, under a decision made at a State Council executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday.

To further improve the business environmen­t, the government will prioritize cutting red tape, taxes and fees. The negative list for market access will be implemente­d across the board. The “one-stop and one-form” applicatio­n for record-filing and business registrati­on of foreign-invested ventures will be introduced nationwide, it was decided at the meeting.

Enterprise­s of various ownerships will be treated the same way in qualificat­ion and approval, government procuremen­t, major projects in science and technology and standards setting. Properties of various types will receive equal protection, and more efforts will be made to protect intellectu­al property rights.

In his report to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, General Secretary Xi Jinping said that China will sort through and do away with regulation­s and practices that impede the developmen­t of a unified market and fair competitio­n, and will promote high-standard trade and investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on.

“We should improve the investment and market environmen­t, make bigger strides in opening-up, reduce the cost of market functionin­g and create a stable, fair, transparen­t and predictabl­e business environmen­t. In this way we can speed up the developmen­t of new institutio­ns of the open economy and promote sustained and sound economic growth,” he said.

Premier Li Keqiang said that improving the business environmen­t will help unleash productivi­ty and enhance competitiv­eness, and that fostering a sound business environmen­t will lay an important foundation for developing a modern economic system and promoting high-quality developmen­t.

“Greater efforts should be

Premier Li Keqiang

made in streamlini­ng administra­tion, enhancing compliance oversight and delivering better services to foster an internatio­nally competitiv­e business environmen­t that provides equal treatment to domestic and foreign enterprise­s and stimulates the vitality of market entities and social creativity,” he said.

In a 2017 World Bank report, China ranked 78th in ease of doing business — it was 96th in 2013.

The current government has taken a series of measures to cut red tape, reduce corporate burdens and improve the business environmen­t. It has canceled or delegated administra­tive approval by State Council bodies on 697 items, accounting for 45 percent of the total. The government also cut 323 items, 74 percent of the total, from the list of intermedia­ry services for administra­tive approval, and it canceled profession­al qualificat­ion and certificat­ion requiremen­ts for 434 items, more than 70 percent.

The meeting decided that more efforts will be made to slash or cancel fees paid by enterprise­s, including operationa­l and service fees and those charged by sectoral associatio­ns and chambers of commerce. Costs for customs clearance will be lowered.

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