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The five most important moves in Xi’s big China cabinet shake-up

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BEIJING: China’s sweeping government restructur­ing plan gives President Xi Jinping more direct control over the levers of money and power by consolidat­ing, creating or eliminatin­g dozens of agencies.

The plan presented to the National People’s Congress yesterday leaves 26 cabinet-level ministries tasked with regulating industries and initiative­s at the heart of Xi’s policy agenda. Their duties range from curbing risk in the country’s US$43 trillion banking and insurance sectors to overseeing aid programmes for the president’s Belt and Road trade-and-infrastruc­ture initiative.

“In the past it wasn’t clear who had ultimate responsibi­lity, with issue areas split between different ministries,” said Yi Kwan Chu, a director in the China practice at the Washington-based Albright Stonebridg­e Group consulting firm. “There were too many cooks in the kitchen, creating chaos.” Here are some highlights:

> Central bank becomes more central China handed its central bank powers to write rules for much of the financial sector, while merging the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the China Insurance Regulatory Commission. The moves create a new regulatory structure for finance with the People’s Bank of China as its central pivot point.

> Stronger environmen­tal watchdog The moves will see China expand its environmen­tal ministry, creating a new Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

The new body will absorb some roles now held by the state planner, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

“This is in line with the idea of consolidat­ing power in one ministry for a stronger and better coordinate­d environmen­tal agenda,” said Li Shuo, a climate policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia. More details are needed – including the new body’s leader – before analysts can assess policy plans.

> Agency for Xi’s pet project

The plan combines “formerly scattered and often overlooked units under the minis- tries of commerce and foreign affairs” and creates a new body responsibl­e for internatio­nal developmen­t to supervise China’s overseas aid efforts, said Yanmei Xie, a China policy analyst for Gavekal Dragonomic­s in Beijing.

That agency will provide a bureaucrat­ic focal point for the Belt and Road Initiative, a massive programme to build or expand roads, railways, ports, pipelines and power plants around the globe.

It has a “mission explicitly to support China’s geopolitic­al strategies, including the ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative,” Xie said.

>Anti-monopoly regulator empowered The new market supervisio­n administra­tion appears set to be a powerful new regulator for companies operating in China – absorbing the State Administra­tion for Industry and Commerce, the General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine and the China Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The changes create the country’s first specialist agency focused on anti-monopoly issues, said David Cohen, a Beijing-based managing editor for the China Policy consulting firm.

The agency will also oversee the State Intellectu­al Property Office, the focus of a potential trade dispute between the United States and China.

> New ‘Mega Ministry’ for agricultur­e China is building a more powerful agricultur­e agency – absorbing roles held by the NDRC and the ministries of commerce, land and water resources – as growing Chinese appetites exacerbate historical food supply concerns.

“Organising things around issue areas makes a lot of sense” for businesses who can now deal with one regulatory body, said Chu, of Albright Stonebridg­e.

“Now, the big question is who is going to be in charge of these new mega-ministries.” Appointees could be announced as soon as Monday. — Bloomberg

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