China Daily

Delivery data and school food are key topics

- By WANG YIQING wangyiqing@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, including express delivery data sharing, tax and administra­tive fees, school food safety, rural collective property rights and chemical accidents.

The State Post Bureau invited senior executives of Alibaba affiliate Cainiao and SF Express, two major domestic parcel carriers, to talks in Beijing, to resolve their dispute that blocked access to each other’s customer data.

The bureau stressed the significan­ce of the developmen­t of e-commerce and the express delivery industry, and urged the enterprise­s to jointly promote the healthy and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the entire industry and provide customers with better express delivery services.

The two enterprise­s agreed to resume cooperatio­n and data transmissi­on from June 3.

Reducing tax

Shi Yaobin, vice-minister of finance, said at a meeting of the State Council on June 9 that the central government will carry out several measures to further ease the tax burden on enterprise­s by about 283 billion yuan ($42 billion), part of measures to ease the 1 trillion yuan in taxes enterprise­s face this year.

He also said reducing tax and administra­tive fees could enhance the vitality of the enterprise­s to further expand their business, which would increase tax revenue.

In the next stage, the ministry will further improve the list-based management system of administra­tive charges, in order to curb arbitrary charging. Fan Xuehui, an official with the China Food and Drug Administra­tion, said recently that food safety in schools has been basically establishe­d.

The authority made clear its requiremen­ts on school food safety, and demanded schools take key responsibi­lity for food safety. Fan said frequent food safety scandals in schools and kindergart­ens indicated that there are still shortfalls.

Rural property rights

Minister of Agricultur­e Han Changfu explained the reform of rural collective property rights to the media. The reform, Han said, will explore new methods and operations for collective property rights and develop a new type of collective economy. In this process, rural residents’ wishes will be fully respected.

The reform is expected to be finished in five years. According to the central government’s requiremen­ts, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and the Central Rural Work Office will choose 100 counties to launch pilot programs.

Fu Jianhua, deputy director of the State Administra­tion of Work Safety, said on June 11 that local authoritie­s, department­s and enterprise­s should take measures to boost safety protection and reduce accidents involving dangerous chemicals.

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