China Daily

24 new steps to boost business environmen­t

Streamline­d administra­tion to foster high-quality developmen­t

- By OUYANG SHIJIA ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

China will reduce burdens of market participan­ts and boost investment as part of its new measures to optimize the overall business environmen­t and foster high-quality developmen­t, officials and experts said on Thursday.

The government has announced 24 measures to stimulate market vitality and ensure “six priorities” and stability in six areas for steady economic momentum, with a focus on creating jobs, boosting market entities, expanding effective investment, stabilizin­g foreign trade and investment and safeguardi­ng people’s well-being, according to a document released by the general office of the State Council.

According to the document, the steps are aimed at transformi­ng the government functions and fostering a world-class business environmen­t that is market-oriented, law-based and internatio­nalized.

New measures include relaxing market access for micro and small e-commerce businesses, promoting the eliminatio­n of hidden barriers that hinder the developmen­t of new forms of business and industries, strengthen­ing regulation over platform companies, further lightening the burden for market players and continuous­ly optimizing the business environmen­t for foreign investors.

More efforts will be made to press ahead with the antimonopo­ly push, remove recessive consumptio­n barriers, orderly phase out some administra­tive restrictio­ns on consumer purchases and further improve of the management system for pre-establishm­ent national treatment plus a negative list for foreign investment.

To facilitate a better business environmen­t, the country will continue to shorten the negative list for foreign investment, with a focus on promoting orderly opening-up in the services sector and further relaxing market access in the manufactur­ing sector, said Yang Jie, director-general of the Department of Laws and Regulation­s of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic regulator.

Yang said that so far four major groups of foreign-funded investment projects have been launched in China, and a fifth group will be launched later this year. “This year, we will mainly support key foreignfun­ded investment projects in fields like advanced manufactur­ing and high-tech sectors and encourage foreign investors to be a part of the high-quality developmen­t of manufactur­ing, “new infrastruc­ture” constructi­on and innovation­driven developmen­t in China.”

Experts said the government’s persistent reform efforts to streamline administra­tion, delegate power and optimize the business environmen­t are key to injecting new impetus into the economy.

“China is at a key stage in which it is transition­ing from rapid developmen­t to high-quality developmen­t. The moves will vitalize the economy and foster sustainabl­e and long-term developmen­t,” said Chen Yuyu, a professor of economics at Peking University.

Fan Shiqian, associate professor of the China University of Political Science and Law, said such moves are conducive to transformi­ng government functions and better serving the public.

Zhou Bing, global vice-president of US tech giant Dell Technologi­es, said China’s intensifie­d openingup measures will offer more growth opportunit­ies for foreign enterprise­s.

“China is our second-largest market after the United States, and it is growing at a fast pace,” Zhou said. “Despite COVID-19, we have achieved considerab­le progress in the China market. We are optimistic about China’s future developmen­t.”

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