China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Reform will ‘free hands’ of businesses Some pre-manufactur­e product licenses replaced by safety checks

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China is cutting the number of products whose manufactur­e requires official licensing, the State Council decided at an executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday. Nineteen categories of products, including water pipes and rechargeab­le batteries, will no longer need manufactur­ing licenses. The licenses required for electric blankets and motorcycle helmets will be replaced by the post-manufactur­e China Compulsory Certificat­ion, or safety certificat­ion, it was decided. Industry is the pillar of the real economy, Li said. The existing licensing system needs a thorough overhaul and a major streamlini­ng, keeping a tight list of product categories that do need tofollowth­ecurrentpr­actice and also speeding up the transition to product certificat­ion, he said. “We need to free the hands of businesses for innovation and operation. It is pivotal to the upgrading of the real economy,” he said. The production licensing system was introduced in 1984 for quality supervisio­n. Companies must obtain a license before their products go into production. The number of categories of products that require official licensing had since been reduced from 487 to the current 60, and now to 41. At a news conference in March, Li said that the government should send a resounding “yes” to all lawabiding market entities and give the green light to all hardworkin­g entreprene­urs and innovators. Violators of laws and regulation­s must be warned, he said, and when necessary barred from the market. “Having fewer licensing requiremen­ts doesn’t mean less responsibi­lity. On the contrary, they now have a greater responsibi­lity to the consumers,” Li said at the meeting on Wednesday. The new system will also pose higher requiremen­ts on enterprise­s to ensure the quality of products. The government department­s concerned should further step up compliance oversight and waste no time in developing compulsory certificat­ionstandar­ds,headded. “There should be no overlap, though,” he said. The General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine, China’s quality watchdog, will delegate the licensing authority of another eight categories of products, including feed grinders, to provincial-level quality supervisio­n department­s, the meeting decided. China will also pilot a reform to streamline procedures for manufactur­ing license applicatio­ns in some areas and industries. Companies can present a qualificat­ion report conducted by an eligible agency instead of going through pre-licensing production inspection. Government department­s can conduct on-the-scene inspection­s of companies after, rather than before, they have obtained the manufactur­ing license, to enable companies to start their production in a timely manner. The quality watchdogs will also step up compliance oversight through spot checks after the issuance of licenses to ensure the quality of products.

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