China Daily

Government reform

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Upon taking office this March, Premier Li Keqiang vowed to create a more favorable environmen­t to fully release the vitality of economy by reducing administra­tive approval procedures and delegating more power to lower levels. In the months since then he has been as good as his word, and the State Council has cancelled and delegated to lower bodies more than 300 administra­tive approval procedures; as a result, the number of company registrati­ons has grown by 25 percent while private investment has stayed higher than government-led investment, with a growth rate of about 23 percent.

But the key phase in transformi­ng the function of government is still to come, says an opinion piece Xinhua News Agency. The central government’s resolve to reduce bureaucrac­y and transform its function will be illusory without the cooperatio­n of local government­s.

Like reform at the central level, transforma­tion of local government­s’ functions should include two aspects, namely cutting some redundant, unnecessar­y powers and strengthen­ing their capacity in some fields that need regulation.

Changing their functions is no excuse for local government­s to evade their responsibi­lities. It means shifting more resources to public services.

That in turn requires redistribu­tion of personnel resources in local government­s. While the number of staff in some department­s has grown to an astonishin­g extent, some other department­s are in dire need of workers to perform their duties.

A small but widely representa­tive example is the health supervisio­n agency of the Yuanzhou zone in Guyuan, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, where a total of 48 staff members have to supervise 1,264 catering enterprise­s, 560 public places, 91 medical institutio­ns and 176 schools, distribute­d in every corner of the zone. How can it do its work well without enough staff?

The situation is especially shocking compared with some officials playing computer games during office hours.

Premier Li said local government­s should be determined to strengthen the bottom levels that directly serve the people, while also cutting some unnecessar­y power. It is reform of the bottom end of government that will decide the actual result of the whole.

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