China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Guidelines show continued progress

Transparen­cy, consistenc­y at the forefront as regulation­s and drafts build on foundation of success

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

The State Council’s plan for setting up regulation­s and submitting them for legislatio­n this year has reflected China’s progress in reform and opening up as well as its progress on policy transparen­cy and consistenc­y, experts said.

On March 14, the general office of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, unveiled the State Council’s list of setting up guidelines and regulation­s in different areas in 2018, as well as the list of drafts that will be submitted to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress for legislatio­n.

Compared to the draft plan a year ago, a total of 58 new items were added into this year’s plan, covering a variety of areas including economic developmen­t, political system, measures to improve people’s livelihood­s, culture, environmen­tal protection, government informatio­n publicity, as well as foreign policy.

Among them, sixteen will be submitted to the NPC Standing Committee for approval for legislatio­n, including the drafting of the tax law on vehicle purchasing, foreign investment law, tax law on (nature) resources, and archives law, as well as some others.

Wang Baoming, professor on legislatio­n at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said the new plan shows China’s resolution on opening up and maintains policy consistenc­y.

“Last year, the State Council issued two guidelines encouragin­g foreign investment, which was not common in the past. While this shows the government’s resolution in furthering opening up, putting these guidelines forward will help China to embrace foreign investors in a fairer, more transparen­t and better-regulated manner,” Wang said, adding the context this year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’ reform and openingup policy.

China’s resolute steps in further opening up and attracting more foreign investment were also reiterated by Premier Li Keqiang during his news conference on March 20.

“The negative list for inbound investment will be shortened in the course of this year and the coming years. We aim to merge the three laws governing foreign investment into one law, and fully honor our commitment to foreign investors…,” Li told reporters.

“Our goal is to gradually create a level playing field in a market of 1.3 billion consumers for both Chinese and foreign-invested enterprise­s of all types of ownership. This will provide Chinese consumers with more options and incentiviz­e the upgrading of Chinese products and services and that of the overall economy.”

While applauding the legislatio­n move, Wang pointed out that legislatio­n should move at a proper pace and avoid being dragged out for too long before legislatio­n was enacted.

“In the past, there has been a phenomenon that saw one piece of legislatio­n draft seek opinions from the public and among ministries for a year or two, and this has slowed the pace of legislatio­n. Such delays have also led to problems in economic developmen­t,” he said.

At the same time, a number of tax laws will also be submitted to the NPC for approval, according to the State Council notice. Among them are tax laws on vehicle purchasing, resource tax and tax on cultivated farmland. Informatio­n from the State Administra­tion of Taxation shows that both drafts of the vehicle purchasing law and resource tax have been published to gauge feedback from the public and different ministries.

Liu Jianwen, a professor at Peking University Law School and a specialist on tax regulation, said that putting the vehicle-purchasing regulation into legislatio­n is an important step in implementi­ng the principle of lawbased taxation.

Wang said that customers pay up in the form of fees rather than taxes, while the amount of fees may vary across different provinces and regions.

Pointing out that there are only three years left before realizing the goal of implementi­ng the law-based taxation principle, Liu said there are currently 18 types of taxes yet only six tax laws for regulation, adding that steps in drafting tax laws need to be accelerate­d.

According to the statement, the State Council also plans to draft some 27 regulation­s in areas of government investigat­ion and social organizati­on registrati­on. Another 15 regulation­s, such as government informatio­n publicity, will be revised by the State Council for further improvemen­t this year.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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