China Daily

Memo gets tough on import-export outfits

- By ZHONG NAN in Beijing and REN XIAOJIN in Guangzhou Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China released its first memo imposing dozens of punitive measures against discredite­d trading companies to further facilitate and safeguard trading activities, especially with economies linked to the Belt and Road Initiative, senior customs officials said.

The Memorandum of Cooperatio­n on Jointly Introducin­g Punitive Measures Against Discredite­d Import and Export Enterprise­s was released on Tuesday.

It is designed to tackle such illegal activities as smuggling, tariff payments in arrears and shell companies, to better regulate foreign trade, especially trade transactio­ns involving the initiative. It is thought to include some of the toughest such measures ever released.

The memorandum, which took effect on Tuesday, says 33 central government department­s—including the Ministry of Public Security, the State Administra­tion for Industry and Commerce and Supreme People’s Court — will work together to keep a sharp eye on all trade companies nationwide, setting up a tight credit management and supervisio­n network.

“The public security authority will ban legal representa­tives of discredite­d companies from leaving the country, and the rights of discredite­d companies, such as those related to foreign exchange quotas, financing and credit, will also be severely affected by their loss of credibilit­y,” said Li Guo, viceminist­er of the General Administra­tion of Customs.

The memo details and quantifies 39 punitive measures based on laws and regulation­s. Li said measures address market access, industry standards and other key areas such as industry and commerce, taxation, quality inspection, finance and environmen­tal protection.

“This will not only provide more legal assurance for Chinese companies to conduct business with markets along the Belt and Road Initiative, but will also send a signal to the global market that China is deepening its reform in the foreign trade sector,” said He Jingtong, a trade professor at Nankai University in Tianjin.

The new document bolsters measures already taken.

By Tuesday, Chinese courts had blocked the purchase of 6.15 million airline tickets and 2.2 million train tickets by people with negative credit records, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission said. Some 71,000 people have been kept from taking senior jobs or becoming legal representa­tives of companies.

Authoritie­s have denied 814 requests to leave the country, 1,469 companies were unable to obtain land and 1,192 companies were not allowed to issue bonds. Financial institutio­ns have tightened 1,624 accounts’ credit limits or refused credit services.

Meng Yang, director-general of GAC’s department of customs control and inspection, said the agency is also encouragin­g exports to countries and regions with which China has mutual recognitio­n as an authorized economic operator through the World Customs Organizati­on.

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