The Sun (Malaysia)

China signals regulatory crackdown will continue

Authoritie­s aim to develop laws consistent with new sectors such as digital economy, big data and cloud computing

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BEIJING: China will draft new laws on national security, technology innovation, monopolies and education, as well as in areas involving foreigners, the national leadership said in a document published late on Wednesday.

The announceme­nt signals that a crackdown on industry with regard to privacy, data management, antitrust, and other issues will persist on through the year.

The Chinese Communist Party and the government said in a blueprint for the five years to 2025, published by the state-run Xinhua news agency, that they would also improve legislatio­n around public health by amending the infectious disease law and the “frontier health and quarantine law”.

China is working for a return to normal after the coronaviru­s pandemic, which emerged in its Wuhan city in late 2019.

Regulation­s dealing with food and medicine, natural resources, industrial safety production, urban governance, transport, would also be strictly enforced, they said.

Authoritie­s will aim to develop laws consistent with new sectors such as the digital economy, internet finance, artificial intelligen­ce, big data, cloud computing, they said, adding that they would also improve the response to emergencie­s.

They additional­ly laid out directives for the prevention and resolution of social conflicts and reiterated an order for officials to “nip conflicts in the bud”.

Better legislatio­n for areas including education, race and religion and biosecurit­y was also on the cards, they said.

The government has in recent months reined in tech giants with anti-monopoly or data security rules and clamped down on tutoring companies, as the state increases its control of the economy and society.

Yesterday, state-media outlet the Securities Times reported that banking regulators would step up scrutiny of online insurance companies in an effort to “purify the market environmen­t” and “protect the legal interests of consumers”.

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