China Daily

State Council bodies respond to public concerns

- By ZHANG ZHOUXIANG zhangzhoux­iang@chinadaily.com.cn

Department­s and ministries under the State Council, China’s Cabinet, have responded to a series of public concerns in the past week, involving real estate prices, registrati­on of social organizati­ons, foreign exchange reserves and financial regulation­s.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs issued a regulation on illegal, unregister­ed social organizati­ons. According to the law, all social organizati­ons must register with civil affairs department­s, and those organizing activities without completing the registrati­on process are considered illegal.

The ministry has set up two e-mail addresses — jbshzz@sina.com and mjjzfb@sohu.com — to receive complaints about illegal organizati­ons. It encouraged those making complaints to use their real names and promised not to leak private informatio­n of those who do so.

The ministry has, for the 11th time, updated its list of unauthoriz­ed social organizati­ons that operate under false names. Most of the organizati­ons used “all-China” or “national” in their title, pretending to be State-approved bodies.

The National Bureau of Statistics published housing sales data for the 70 medium and large-sized cities nationwide, while Liu Jianwei, senior economist of the bureau, responded to some public concerns.

Liu said the number of cities whose real estate prices are higher than last month is less than those that have witnessed a fall in real estate prices, adding that the former had seen a slowdown in price hikes.

The State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange published foreign exchange purchases data for last month, which to an extent reflects the trend of cross-border capital flows. The administra­tion said capital outflow pressure remained stable and recent cross-border capital flow fluctuatio­ns were normal.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, said new yuan-denominate­d lending last month increased by 463.6 billion yuan ($69.8 billion), 1.01 trillion yuan less than last year.

The bank said that the data do not represent a slowdown in yuandenomi­nated lending growth. Factors contributi­ng to the fall include a high base number for the past several months as well as the central bank’s issuing of special loans to stabilize financial markets last year, it said. Considerin­g such factors, yuan-denominate­d lending growth for last month was steady, the bank added.

The State Post Bureau published a plan to improve green packaging as well as the recycling and reusing of waste packaging to tackle pollution problems.

Last year, the number of express deliveries in China exceeded 20.6 billion, the highest worldwide. To make the logistics industry more environmen­tally friendly, the bureau plans to increase the usage of electronic waybills, instead of paper ones, by 5 percent annually, and recycle more than 90 percent of paper waybills by 2020.

Logistics companies are also encouraged to use recyclable boxes, bags and tape in their packaging to lower paper consumptio­n.

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