China Daily Global Edition (USA)

CHINA Experts say credit law needed urgently

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Deputies to the National People’s Congress and legal experts called for the establishm­ent of a national credit law as soon as possible to accelerate the country’s economic developmen­t and improve the rule of law.

In September, the NPC Standing Committee, the country’s top legislativ­e body, said it had included legislatio­n on a credit system into its work plan in the next five years, although it is not an urgent item and has no specific timetable.

The legislatur­e added it would do more research and consider reviewing it if the study was favorable.

“I think now is the best time. We should start writing the law as quickly as we can,” said Zhao Hongmei, a professor who specialize­s in economic and commercial law at China University of Political Science and Law.

“We have better legal support for the legislatio­n, such as blacklists of dishonest companies and punishment­s for those who don’t carry out court rulings,” she said. “It’s time to integrate these legal documents and make them a national-level law, as the current articles are not strong enough to threaten dishonest people, let alone to improve more residents’ awareness of being honest.”

Shi Xinzhong, a law professor at Capital Normal University, said the articles regarding the credit system now are scattered in civil, economic, administra­tive and criminal laws, “which is neither effective to punish the dishonest nor to build China’s credibilit­y through the rule of law”.

Liu Junhai, another law professor at Renmin University of China, said making a credit law will play a big role in improving market exchanges.

“Our government­s, enterprise­s and consumers, I believe, will trust more in internatio­nal deals if we have such a law, because every businesspe­rson wants transactio­ns to be guaranteed by law,” he said.

Moreover, he added, the law will also contribute to ensuring the transparen­cy of market exchanges, maintainin­g transactio­n security, lowering costs and improving the business environmen­t.

“The call for legislatio­n hasn’t stopped over the past decade,” he said.

As of Sept 30, the Supreme People’s Court had disclosed more than 12 million cases in which people failed to carry out court verdicts.

China Central Television reported recently that economic losses caused by bad credit was more than 600 billion yuan ($8.7 billion).

In March, Zheng Jie, an NPC deputy and chairman of China Mobile’s branch in Zhejiang province, submitted a proposed statute to the top legislatur­e. He said it was necessary to tidy up the disordered documents and urgently establish a unified credit informatio­n sharing platform among banks, government department­s, judicial authoritie­s and companies.

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