Beijing Review

The Nation’s Market Unificatio­n

- By Lan Xinzhen Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to lanxinzhen@cicgameric­as.com

On April 10, the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the State Council unveiled a new guideline for fast-tracking the establishm­ent of a unified national market that is efficient, standardiz­ed, open and allows fair competitio­n. It is also vital to establish unified market rules and regulation­s across the country and promote the smooth flow of goods, factors, and resources on a wider scale. The guideline emphasizes that local protection and regional barriers should be broken down.

The Chinese Government intends to improve the efficiency and expand the scale of China’s domestic market against the global backdrop of pandemic resurgence­s and a weak economic recovery. Meanwhile, China itself is plugging a dual circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm that takes domestic circulatio­n as the main body, with domestic and internatio­nal circulatio­ns reinforcin­g each other.

One decade ago, the Central Committee of the CPC decided to establish a unified, open, competitiv­e and orderly market system, serving as the basis for the market to take on a decisive role in resource allocation. In recent years, the Central Government has eliminated varied rules and practices that hamper market unificatio­n and fair competitio­n, fully implemente­d the negative list system of market access and developed fundamenta­l institutio­ns in line with the principles of equal access, fair competitio­n, impartial oversight, openness and legal compliance. Progress has been made as China’s socialist market economy has taken shape.

However, throughout this process, supporting measures have yet to be put in place; not even to mention the eliminatio­n of existing restrictio­ns. Enterprise­s have encountere­d their fair share of institutio­nal obstacles. The market for factors of production lagged behind, there was no consensus on market regulation, plus local and regional barriers often put their spokes in the wheels; overall insufficie­nt market competitio­n further hindered structural adjustment­s. Until these problems are all solved, forging a sound socialist market economy will remain a distant dream.

The guidelines demonstrat­e the Central Government understand­s the obstructin­g influences.

China will now further unify its basic systems and rules, including those for property rights protection, market access, fair competitio­n and social credit. Facilities and platforms in different sectors, including logistics, deal informatio­n and transactio­n platforms, should be connected across the country. Unified markets should be also built for various production factors, including land, labor, capital, technology, data and energy. Unified standards for goods and services are underway and supervisio­n, regulation and law enforcemen­t will become more standardiz­ed.

At the same time, the government will strengthen its antimonopo­ly efforts, deal with unfair competitio­n in accordance with the law, and comprehens­ively clean up preferenti­al policies that discrimina­te against foreign enterprise­s as well as those funded by investment­s from other parts of China.

China will fully leverage the decisive role of the market in resource allocation and give better play to the government’s function. Intensifie­d market developmen­t cannot be seen separate from national market unificatio­n; the free flow of goods and factors as well as efficient and fair resource allocation all must prevail. The new developmen­t paradigm urgently requires a nationally unified big market. Only through a highly interconne­cted domestic market and a channel to achieve enhanced market efficiency, improved labor productivi­ty, increased incomes, as well as improved quality across the board, can market capacity expand and advantages of unificatio­n be given full rein.

A unified Chinese market in turn supports the internatio­nal community. The world is looking forward to seeing a more open Chinese market, with internatio­nal capital preparing to tap into its huge potential. This will promote the formation of a domestic circulatio­n, deepen China’s opening up based on flows of goods and factors of production, optimize the business environmen­t whilst adhering to the principles of marketizat­ion and internatio­nalization, and establish a new system for a higher-level open economy. The combinatio­n of the aforementi­oned will intensify connectivi­ty between domestic and internatio­nal markets, further enhance the free, safe and convenient cross-border flow of factors of production, and create a strong gravitatio­nal field for advanced resources around the world. BR

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