China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Ministries respond to key public concerns

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

Central ministries and department­s have responded to a series of public concerns, mainly including affordable housing and medical advertisem­ent management.

Affordable housing auditing

China’s National Audit Office revealed a recent round of auditing over the country’s government-subsidized housing projects on June 24, also known as the affordable housing program, a project designed to provide housing for people with low incomes to make their dwelling more affordable.

The audit, running from December 2016 to March 2017, covers government-subsidized housing projects across 31 provinces, municipali­ties, and autonomous regions, among which 17,200 projects were comprehens­ively investigat­ed. The review mainly targets housing projects started in 2016.

This has been the office’s fifth round of auditing on the country’s affordable housing projects.

Officials from the National Audit Office told at a news briefing late in June that in general, in 2016, the constructi­on of affordable housing played an important role in improving people’ s livelihood­s and promoting urbanizati­on, creating proper livingcond­itions for urban residents with low incomes and driving developmen­t of related industries.

Meanwhile, key problems were also detected in this round of audit. Some regions and department­s still have problems such as lack of strict management of the housing funds and failure to strictly implement the affordable housing policy. These problems take various forms, such as fund embezzleme­nt and poor infrastruc­ture quality of housing projects. Also, affordable housing projects were found to be provided to families that do not fall into groups of residents eligible for such subsidiari­es.

These issues have led to the scenario that some affordable housing projects that have started constructi­on a year ago are still not available for residents that need them.

The auditing authoritie­s will push for accelerate­d constructi­on of key affordable housing projects, making them available to residents in need.

A total of 53.23 billion yuan ($7.85 billion) of special funds for building subsidized housing projects were found to have not been put in place one year after the money was earmarked by central finance, audit results show. It calls for more scientific fund management for affordable housing funds, the audit office said. Inconsiste­nce of releasing funds and constructi­on of housing projects is also part of the reason for such delays in earmarking funds.

More tailored improvemen­ts are needed for more proper design and management of affordable housing projects; for example, government-purchased services in shanty town renovation programs also need to meet with financial budgets at local-government level.

The government invested 1.48 trillion yuan in 2016 to build 6.06 million new homes for shanty redevelopm­ent, according to the Ministry of Housing and UrbanRural Developmen­t.

Banning of fake medical ads

The phenomenon of TV commercial­s for medicine using actors as doctors and medical profession­als recommendi­ng certain types of medicine have led to public anger as many people said they have been deceived. The State Administra­tion for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) has finally begun to combat the scandals.

The SAIC has recently set up a special investigat­ion group by working jointly with the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television, the State Administra­tion of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine, as well as the Ministry of Public Security to give grounded research to fake medicine ad cases across the country. Each department will probe cases within their lawful mandate. Currently, investigat­ions by the SAIC as well as market regulation authoritie­s are underway, and investigat­ion results will be informed to the public timely to respond to public concerns.

Actors pretending to be medical profession­als in TV commercial­s have been a problem for many years, and reported by various media outlets. Some of the actors pretending to be medical profession­al have used more than 10 different titles.

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