China Daily (Hong Kong)

City’s work on social credit to be completed by 2020

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing will accelerate developmen­t of a social credit system by completing the legislativ­e and regulatory work in the sector by 2020, a senior official said.

Tan Xuxiang, head of the Beijing Municipal Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said by that time Beijing will have establishe­d a public credit informatio­n service platform covering all the permanent residents of the city.

“It’s also one of the measures to create a fair market for businesses,” he said.

The platform will combine informatio­n from the government­al and social sectors and show a full picture of a person’s credit status.

“We will also have a blacklist and make it available for public use for market access, public services, travel and employment,” he said. “We will continue to complete the blacklist and limit their activities.”

At the same time, residents who have good credit will be rewarded, according to the plan. In some public service areas, they will be provided with easier or faster access.

We will also have a blacklist and make it available for public use for market access, public services, travel and employment.”

Tan Xuxiang, head of the Beijing Municipal Developmen­t and Reform Commission

Beijing has been working on establishi­ng the credit system for years. According to the city, it has organized a third party to supervise and monitor credit status in 12 key sectors.

Huang Yong, head of the internatio­nal cooperatio­n center of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said at an industrial summit earlier this month that the government should accelerate research on the credit system’s core technology.

“It requires innovation and a fundamenta­l database, which will help the credit system to develop from quantity to quality,” he said.

Meng Wei, an NDRC spokespers­on, said earlier that China has seen clear progress in building a social credit system. In the financial sector, the authoritie­s have published the names of 400 people said to be involved in severe fraudulent activity. The NDRC has signed a memorandum of agreement with more than 60 government department­s to share credit informatio­n.

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