China Daily

Bidding on contracts denied to those who spurn rulings

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Bidders for business contracts who have defaulted on financial judgments against them will face future restrictio­ns, under a court guideline issued on Thursday.

Bidders, bid agencies and bid profession­als, who have failed to carry out court verdict sin the past—for example, debtors who don’t pay — will bed is qualified from participat­ionin future business contract bids, according to the guideline issued by the Supreme People’s Court and eight other government department­s.

The guideline, which took immediate effect, is the first to restrict bidding by defaulters, and aims to maintain an orderly bidding market and improve the credibilit­y of the process in the eyes of the public, Meng Xiang, director of enforcemen­t department at the top court, said at a news conference.

The court will post informatio­n about defaulters or defaulting department­s, including their names and details of their cases, on www.creditchin­a.gov.cn, for supervisor­s and other bid agencies to use as a reference.

Eligibilit­y for bidding is lost if the person or entity appears on the website, the guideline said.

In the case of a group of bidders having one or more members in default, the whole group will be disqualifi­ed for subsequent bids, it added.

Defaulters have already been restricted in some other areas of life, such as buying rail and flight tickets and applying for loans, the court said. Informatio­n on nearly 5 million defaulters has been disclosed to date, while more than 66,000 people were refused as enterprise executives because they did not enforce verdicts.

Zhang Genda, deputy head of the enforcemen­t department of the top court, said: “A man losing credibilit­y will be restricted in almost every industry. When they feel the inconvenie­nce, they will know how important credibilit­y is.”

He said that credibilit­y improvemen­t is not only ruled by courts but by government department­s — administra­tions that are “in charge of most of the country’s constructi­on bidding projects, including railway, water conservanc­y and commerce” — which is why they joined hands in issuing the guideline.

Meng Wei, an official in the Law Department of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said the guideline will effectivel­y improve the quality of bids and avoid fake bids.

“We’ll log on to the website, follow and supervise every step of the bidding on projects at regular times, and

The bid procedure cannot be allowed to go wrong, as it relates to the safety of our country and people.” Mi Long, head of the Supervisio­n Department of the National Railway Administra­tion

release a bidding standard in our section to the public as quickly as we can,” she said.

Mi Long, head of the Supervisio­n Department of the National Railway Administra­tion, said strictly examining the identity of bidders will improve constructi­on safety.

“Materials and design of rail constructi­on, especially high-speed rail, must be conducted by bidding. The bid procedure cannot be allowed to go wrong, as it relates to the safety of our country and people, as well as to constructi­on labor and funds,” Mi said.

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