China Daily

Budget openness not enough

- —BEIJING NEWS

On Friday, more than 100 central department­s made public their 2017 annual budgets, with the Ministry of Education among those doing so first. That a growing number of government department­s are disclosing their annual budget informatio­n marks concrete progress toward building a transparen­t government budget.

But despite the tangible progress that has been made in recent years, the budget transparen­cy of public department­s is still far from satisfacto­ry. For various reasons, a large number of public department­s that should make public their budgets fail to do so, and no targeted indexes are introduced to the budgets of subproject­s under a key project.

Besides, even economics experts find it difficult to work where and how money has been spent because of the absence of detailed informatio­n in plain language.

The newly-revised Budget Law stipulates that public department­s should make public their budget informatio­n, but it has no specific stipulatio­ns on what happens if a department fails to comply with this legal requiremen­t. The country’s interim provisions on the accountabi­lity of Party and government officials stipulate that derelictio­ns of duty or behavior that cause “heavy losses” or has a ”very bad influence” on national interests, people’s lives and property, and public property will be held accountabl­e when it comes to the openness of budget.

Only after all of its budgets are made public and an effective accountabi­lity mechanism is put in place for spending on every item can the concept of building a responsibl­e government be really fulfilled. In this respect, people’s congresses at various levels should be granted more power to hold violators accountabl­e while exercising their power of ratifying, adjusting and vetoing the budget of samelevel government­s.

The country should strengthen the applicatio­n of budget openness under the Budget Law, the State Secrecy Law and the regulation on government informatio­n disclosure to offer judicial guarantees for citizens or social organizati­ons to possibly appeal to government department­s for budget openness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong