Shanghai Daily

China vows to better business environmen­t

- (Xinhua)

CHINA will work to tackle the weak areas in its business environmen­t to further improve overall competitiv­eness and sustain the sound momentum of steady economic performanc­e, the State Council’s executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang decided yesterday.

The Chinese government places high importance on improving the country’s business environmen­t. Li has urged government authoritie­s to address the top concerns of businesses and tackle institutio­nal deficienci­es to cultivate a world-class business environmen­t in China.

“In the face of growing internatio­nal competitio­n, we must fully appreciate the pressing need for stepping up the reforms of our government’s functions, which are crucial for energizing market entities and grassroots initiative and for improving China’s overall business environmen­t,” Li said at the meeting.

Recent years have seen the government’s relentless efforts in cutting red tape in light of market bottleneck­s and bringing the country up to advanced global standards in terms of business-friendline­ss. These reform endeavors have achieved notable results.

Latest figures from the Ministry of Commerce showed that in the first half of this year, 29,591 foreign-invested enterprise­s were establishe­d, up 96.6 percent year on year.

According to the 2017 report of the World Bank, China ranked the 78th in ease of doing business, up by 18 spots over 2013. In the revised negative list for foreign investment the Ministry of Commerce issued in June, the number of restrictiv­e items was cut to 48 from 63 in 2017.

It was decided yesterday that another 17 administra­tive permits will be no longer required, including in establishi­ng nursing home for the elderly, declaring invalidity of business licenses, project approval for foreign businesses to invest in road transport, and work permit for Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau residents to work on the mainland.

Six of the above 17 items will be revoked through applying for legal revisions.

Customs clearance and quarantine will be further integrated, and procedures for import and export registrati­on will be streamline­d. Statistics from the department­s of market oversight and commerce will be used directly for customs registrati­on.

Taxation procedure will be streamline­d, and time required for enterprise tax payments will be reduced. Procedure required for immovable property registrati­on will be completed within 15 working days, and time required for a mortgage registrati­on will be shortened to within seven working days.

At the same time, reforms on the enterprise investment project commitment system will be accelerate­d, with government authoritie­s setting criteria and businesses keeping good credit record. A new negative list for businesses will be issued, and any restrictio­ns hampering a level playing field for businesses will be abandoned. Behaviors such as counterfei­ting, infringeme­nts and illegal charges will be cracked down.

Enhancing transparen­cy

Meanwhile, efforts will continue to be made in facilitati­ng public services and reforming administra­tive examinatio­n and approval system by reducing the time, documentat­ion and cost required, and enhancing transparen­cy.

“Our efforts in streamlini­ng administra­tion, delegating powers and improving government services boil down to striking a proper balance between the government and the market and truly allowing the market to play a decisive role in allocating resources,” Li pointed out.

“Instead of redistribu­ting powers among government department­s, we should give full respect and delegate due powers to market entities.”

It was also decided at the meeting that China will carry out phased evaluation­s of the businesses environmen­t across the country and offer further incentives for better performers. Some 28 steps of improving the business environmen­t that have worked well in some regions, including the one-stop service model, and Internet Plus medical insurance, will be disseminat­ed to encourage competitio­n in the quality of business environmen­t across the country.

“The market and our people will have final judgment on the success of our efforts to streamline administra­tion.” Li said. “A key responsibi­lity of the government is to give timely response to public concerns and faithfully live out our commitment to peoplecent­ered developmen­t.”

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