China Daily (Hong Kong)

Government to further cut red tape

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

China will eliminate or delegate to lower-level authoritie­s more items that require government approval, and implement nationwide reform of the review process over constructi­on projects, the State Council’s executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang decided on Wednesday.

“Streamlini­ng administra­tion is as important as tax cuts in stimulatin­g market vitality as we tackle the current downward economic pressure. The key task for the government is to foster a better business environmen­t to energize all market players,” Li said at the meeting. “This will be our important measure for sustaining steady economic growth this year.”

It was decided at the meeting that 25 administra­tive approval items including preapprova­l of corporate names before business registrati­on and preliminar­y review of domestical­ly-produced medicines will be canceled. Six administra­tive approval items including the registrati­on of certain practices and occupation­s will be delegated to government department­s at or below the provincial level.

“Our reform of government functions affects the vested interests of government department­s. However, administra­tive streamlini­ng is a must as excessive and cumbersome review requiremen­ts drive up institutio­nal transactio­n costs and dampen market vitality,” Li said.

“Meanwhile, the government must enhance oversight and improve services. Its focus should shift to setting rules and standards.”

It was also decided at the meeting the pilot reform of the review system for constructi­on projects will be rolled out across the nation. Under unified requiremen­ts, an interagenc­y review process with a single department acting as the lead agency and clear review time frames will be adopted. And practices such as pledging of notificati­on, districtwi­de evaluation, joint reviews and project inspection upon completion will be implemente­d.

The goal is to halve the time required for reviewing constructi­on projects to 120 working days nationwide within the first half of this year.

“Market players must assume their due responsibi­lities and recognize that they take primary responsibi­lity for the projects they undertake, and that they will be held accountabl­e for them on a lifetime basis,” Li said.

“As for the government, it must not interfere in things that do not fall within its purview, and focus on exercising oversight in all areas necessary. This kind of oversight will help ensure fairness and efficiency,” he said.

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