China Daily

Guizhou takes care of the alcohol problem

- The author is a writer with China Daily. liyang@ chinadaily.com.cn

On Sept 1, the provincial government of Guizhou in Southwest China said no alcoholic drinks will be served at official business receptions, making it the province to implement the strictest ban on alcohol since the central authoritie­s tightened discipline supervisio­n after the leadership with Xi Jinping as the core took office in 2012.

The ban in Guizhou is remarkable because the province is home to the prestigiou­s liquor brand Moutai and applies to all Party and government units that operate on taxpayers’ money, including Party department­s, various levels of government­s, branches of the people’s congress and people’s political consultati­ve conference, judicial department­s, investigat­ing and prosecutin­g wings, public institutio­ns and State-owned enterprise­s.

Although the prohibitio­n order says some foreign affairs and investment­promotion activities can be exceptions, prior permission has to be sought from government department heads before serving alcohol at such events and the discipline inspection commission at the same level has to be informed about the matter. It also has detailed rules on the categories, volumes and prices of the alcoholic drinks that can be served on such occasions.

It is almost predictabl­e that alcohol will no longer flow at official business receptions in the province if the ban is strictly implemente­d. Statistics show the Chinese government’s spending on receptions, cars and overseas business trips reached a record high in 2011. Although government spending on official receptions, foreign trips and cars has dropped markedly since 2012, the prohibitio­n order in Guizhou is still remarkable.

Previously, government­s at the provincial, city, county and township levels decided to what extent they would implement the central authoritie­s’ prohibitio­n order. And because of the lack of direct, effective supervisio­n by the central authoritie­s, the ban on alcohol was not strictly enforced, as the central discipline watchdogs have occasional­ly disclosed the “black list” of the violators.

The Guizhou prohibitio­n order reflects the further change in the mentality of provincial authoritie­s as they have taken a stand in concurrenc­e with the central authoritie­s, making strict supervisio­n clear to the lower-level authoritie­s.

The other important aspect of the ban on alcohol at official receptions in Guizhou is that the provincial authoritie­s have supplement­ed the central authoritie­s policy, which has some loopholes that some grassroots officials often take advantage of to consume, for example, expensive liquor in mineral water bottles in canteens instead of fancy restaurant­s.

Guizhou’s move redefines “official business activities”, which includes almost all possible events which officials have occasion to attend during their career and senior officials use to consume as much “alcoholic drinks” as possible. Also, the Guizhou prohibitio­n order makes it clear that senior officials will be held accountabl­e for derelictio­n of duty if they do not discipline their subordinat­es who violate the rule, which is widely seen as one of the most potent clause that makes the ban order too powerful to ignore.

But Guizhou’s ban on alcohol at official business gatherings still has room for improvemen­t, for instance, it can include public supervisio­n of officials’ behavior at business receptions to ensure they think twice before consuming in alcohol.

Still, Guizhou has set an example for other provinces and regions to follow.

 ??  ?? Li Yang
Li Yang

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