Bangkok Post

Social credit system branded ‘Orwellian’

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BEIJING: Beijing’s municipal government will assign citizens and firms “personal trustworth­iness points” by 2021, state media reported yesterday, pioneering China’s controvers­ial plan for a “social credit” system to monitor citizens and businesses.

The system’s rollout has attracted internatio­nal headlines, sparking comparison­s to George Orwell’s novel Nineteen EightyFour, with critics saying it could massively heighten the Chinese Communist Party’s already strict control over society.

In a roadmap plan released in 2014, China said it would by 2021 create a “social credit system” to reward or punish individual­s and corporatio­ns using technology to record various measures of financial

credit, personal behaviour and corporate misdeeds.

But it had not made any mention of using points, as proposed by Beijing’s municipal government in a new plan released on Monday to improve the city’s business environmen­t.

Lists of data, actions and measures will by used to create a trial system of “personal trustworth­iness points” for residents and companies in the capital. The term used can also be translated as “creditwort­hiness” or “integrity”.

The plan did not include details of how the point system would work.

But, it said, informatio­n from the system could impact market access, public

services, travel, employment and the ability to start businesses, with trustworth­y individual­s being provided a “green channel” and those who are blackliste­d being “unable to move a step”.

“This is an important novel approach by Beijing to assess individual­s’ credit and tie it to their whole life,” an unnamed official from the municipal state planner said.

The plan should serve as an example to the rest of the nation for how to improve the behaviour of individual­s and businesses, Xinhua said.

A second system will also be set up to assess the trustworth­iness of government officials and department­s by measuring whether contracts and promises are

honoured, the results of which will be included in performanc­e assessment­s.

The social credit system, which is being built on the principle of “once untrustwor­thy, always restricted”, will encourage government bodies to share more informatio­n about individual and business misdeeds in order to coordinate punishment­s and rewards.

A system for penalising individual­s blackliste­d for such offences as failing to pay a court-mandated fines that was put in place by the central government was extended in March. The penalties include banning offenders from making luxury purchases such as flight or high-speed rail tickets for up to a year.

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