Global Times

New public credit info rules released

Beijing government banned from getting religious belief, genetic details

- By Yin Han

Beijing has released rules on the management of public credit informatio­n, saying that individual­s who have a bad credit record would not get promoted, and that department­s are banned from collecting an individual’s religious and genetic informatio­n.

The Beijing Municipal Government issued a document on the management of public credit informatio­n on Thursday, which manages the administra­tive department­s’ collection, use and publishing of credit informatio­n, Legal Mirror reported on Thursday.

This includes the basic informatio­n of companies and individual­s, and good and bad credit records. The records should be used as a reference in activities, including applying for national subsidies for research programs, employment and profession­al ranking.

Organizati­ons and individual­s who provide fake informatio­n, break their written commitment to administra­tion department­s or receive administra­tive penalties will be considered a bad record, the document says.

Organizati­ons which have been held accountabl­e in cases involving environmen­tal pollution, food safety and quality problems would be tagged with bad records.

The document has been implemente­d starting May.

Individual­s with bad records can not be promoted as a legal representa­tive, senior manager or executive. And organizati­ons with a bad record will undergo frequent checks from authoritie­s and may face limitation­s in activities, including government procuremen­t and Stateowned land use transfers.

“Connecting individual credit to social benefits is necessary to enhance people’s appreciati­on of their credit ratings,” Wang Zhenyu, a fellow at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times.

“And it was published in a timely manner when the internet and big data are widely used, wherein private credit informatio­n could easily be obtained by organizati­ons and the government,” Wang noted.

The regulation specified individual informatio­n that can be collected, such as name, ID card number, educationa­l background and employment informatio­n.

Private informatio­n such as religious belief, genetic informatio­n, fingerprin­t, blood type and medical history is forbidden for credit record use, according to the regulation.

“This is a step forward in private informatio­n protection. Informatio­n such as religious belief and fingerprin­t are very private and have nothing to do with credit ratings, and should be protected,” Wang said.

A previous regulation published in 2002, which set rules based solely on business credit, was abolished. The old regulation did not include provisions on private credit informatio­n or its protection, according to a release from Beijing Municipal Commission of Housing and Urban-rural developmen­t.

“Detailed regulation­s protecting private informatio­n should also be provided, such as identifyin­g parties responsibl­e for preventing the release of certain pieces of informatio­n,” Wang suggested.

Similar programs have been piloted in other provinces such as East China’s Shandong Province, North China’s Hebei Province and Shanxi Province.

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