China Daily

Fair play by firms boosted

Mechanism will bolster private sector by targeting administra­tive monopolies, regional protection­ism

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has ramped up efforts to develop a review mechanism that will ensure local government­s promote fair competitio­n, a move experts said will level the playing field for businesses of various types of ownership and spur domestic and foreign investment.

An official guideline published on May 12 said the central government will, in the next three years, establish a review mechanism that will enable comprehens­ive, forceful oversight, detail clear-cut responsibi­lities and contain a complete set of rules to effectivel­y stamp out anticompet­itive practices.

The guideline, issued by the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, the country’s antitrust regulator, and three other department­s, stipulates that all government documents, regulation­s and policies in areas such as market access, industry developmen­t and government procuremen­t must be subject to fair competitio­n reviews.

The review mechanism will help break administra­tive monopolies, establish a unified, open and orderly competitiv­e market system and develop a business environmen­t that is in line with market principles, the rule of law and internatio­nal standards, it added.

The State Council first introduced a review mechanism for fair competitio­n in a guideline issued in 2016. But it has faced problems such as incomplete rules and a lack of constraint­s within the system, with some local authoritie­s and department­s failing to recognize its significan­ce, the latest guideline said.

Wang Junlin, a partner at Yingke Law Firm who specialize­s in antimonopo­ly law, said the move by the central government is aimed at tackling regional protection­ism, administra­tive monopolies and the preselecti­on of winners during bidding for projects.

“Only by creating an environmen­t that enables fair competitio­n can we ensure market prosperity,” he said. “Otherwise, the growth of the economy will be impeded.”

The review mechanism will pave the way for more private businesses to enter sectors dominated by Stateowned enterprise­s, Wang said.

China’s private investment was down 13.3 percent year-on-year in the first four months of this year due to the impact of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak. Foreign direct investment was down 6.1 percent year-onyear.

Zhang Qinyu, head of the Institute of Economic Laws at China University of Political Science and Law, said a fair competitio­n review mechanism is the pillar for the developmen­t of the private sector.

“The mechanism will help private businesses overcome the various hurdles in market access and business operations and offer them a strong pillar for their prosperity,” he said.

Zhang said it was important for the authoritie­s to troublesho­ot policies that hindered fair competitio­n for the private sector and step up the review of future policies. Confidence was a key factor for the growth of the private sector, he said, and it was damaged by differenti­ated policies.

The introducti­on of the mechanism would impose limits on the behavior of local authoritie­s and spur them to abandon protection­ist policies, Zhang added.

“We can look forward to the enforcemen­t of more stringent reviews of future policies so that the playing field between the public and private sectors can be leveled,” he said.

To enable more effective enforcemen­t, the guideline called for the applicatio­n of more detailed review standards to target malpractic­es such as hindering equal and easy market exits, the offering of subsidies to certain businesses, and carrying out biased oversight.

The government will refine review methods and encourage market regulators to enforce the review mechanism together with policymaki­ng department­s before new policy measures are rolled out by local government­s, the guideline said.

Higher-education institutio­ns, research institutio­ns and profession­al consultanc­ies will be encouraged to take part in the review process, with the government to promote third-party evaluation to fully assess the impact of policies on market competitio­n, it added.

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation will conduct a random inspection of policies and measures each year to see if review procedures have been followed, with sectors and regions with many administra­tive monopolies set to be key targets.

The government will also encourage whistle-blowing on policies and measures suspected of violating fair competitio­n review standards, it added.

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 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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