China Daily

Government aims to improve quality of services

- By XU WEI

The central government has rolled out a raft of measures to improve the quality and efficiency of government services, pledging to further streamline procedures and materials to minimize costs for businesses and enhance public satisfacti­on.

In a guideline published on Jan 16, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, outlined efforts to expand onestop administra­tive services for the general public.

The government will strengthen the developmen­t of channels that the public can use to access services, and more services will be handled at centralize­d centers to ensure unified acceptance and one-stop processing.

Meanwhile, more high-frequency services will be made accessible online as the government seeks to connect regional and department­al platforms into a cohesive network.

The efficiency of the official 12345 hotline will be further enhanced so that it can more effectivel­y handle inquiries, complaints, assistance requests and suggestion­s.

Officials and experts have stressed the significan­ce of the latest policy document in revolution­izing the nation’s administra­tive services and bolstering its business environmen­t.

The policy measures follow decadelong efforts from the central government to streamline administra­tion and improve its services as it seeks to further stimulate social creativity and boost efficiency.

Sun Haibin, head of the bureau of administra­tive approval and services in Wulian county, Shandong province, said the latest guideline has provided “a strong guarantee and guidance” for establishi­ng a new pattern of government services to give businesses and individual­s a stronger sense of gain.

He explained that such guidance has been lacking for grassroots authoritie­s, and the latest policies will resolve that problem.

The latest policy has laid the groundwork for the connectivi­ty and data sharing of different administra­tive service systems, paving the way for authoritie­s to pilot more reform measures to make their services more easily accessible, he said.

He added that the county has already piloted practices to help people manage their affairs in one go under 151 scenarios.

The central government also reaffirmed its commitment to enabling more services to be accessed across provincial-level regions, with more administra­tive items to be processed online and data allowed to be shared across regions.

The empowermen­t of government services with digital technology will receive greater impetus, as the guideline stressed the need to encourage the use of big data, blockchain and artificial intelligen­ce to make services more interactiv­e and data-driven.

Meng Qingguo, a professor with the School of Public Policy and Management at Tsinghua University, said a key feature of the latest policy measures is the emphasis placed on solving problems facing businesses and individual­s.

The government has adopted a user-centric approach as it seeks to refine the methods, procedures and experience­s for its services, he said.

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