China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Campaign targets defaults

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The central government has vowed to prevent defaults in payment to private businesses by government department­s and major State-owned enterprise­s, according to a statement released after a State Council executive meeting on Friday.

According to a decision at the meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang, the General Office of the State Council will lead a targeted campaign to prevent defaults in payments to private businesses by the public sector.

The statement said there will be zero tolerance for defaulters and those found to have committed severe violations will be put on a blacklist and held accountabl­e.

Local authoritie­s and government department­s will be subject to punishment­s including deductions in their treasury deposits.

The cash deposit that is required in the engineerin­g constructi­on sector will be further standardiz­ed, and the cost for commercial debt defaults will be raised by a large margin, the statement said.

The Friday meeting also underlined the importance of better leveraging government­managed guarantee funds to make more financial resources available to micro and small companies.

The statement said that supporting agricultur­al and rural developmen­t as well as small companies should be the priority of all government-managed guarantee and re-guarantee institutio­ns. Small and micro-firms as well as entities engaged in agricultur­al and rural developmen­t with a guarantee volume of up to 5 million yuan ($720,000) per entity will the primary beneficiar­ies.

The statement said that the State Financing Guaranty Fund should not set its guarantee fee rate higher than provincial institutio­ns. Risks should be shared, with both the State Financing Guaranty Fund and financial institutio­ns shoulderin­g no less than 20 percent of the risk. including corporate burdens that are yet to be reduced and difficulti­es faced by small and micro businesses in their financing procedures.

As part of efforts to improve the business environmen­t, more measures to widen the market access will be rolled out. Restrictio­ns for foreign investment outside the negative list will be cleared across the board before March, the guideline said.

Local authoritie­s and government department­s are required to select a slew of highqualit­y projects in areas including civil aviation, railways, road transport and telecommun­ications to attract social capital.

More targeted measures will be unleashed to solve the funding problems for private businesses, with the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission urged to come up with measures to encourage financial institutio­ns in the banking sector to step up credit support for such businesses.

The government will further cut licensing red tape for businesses, with more measures adopted to cut the time needed to start a business.

The time required to start a business in major cities will be cut to 8.5 days before the end of this year, and online access for such services will be further promoted. Product categories requiring official licensing for production will be further cut, and the time required for patent registrati­on will be shortened to six months, the guideline said.

A special oversight campaign will be conducted regarding the equal treatment of foreign-invested enterprise­s in areas such as government procuremen­t, subsidies and required qualificat­ions. Local authoritie­s are also required to establish a provincial-level mechanism for filing complaints for foreigninv­ested enterprise­s.

More measures will be adopted to protect property rights, including intellectu­al property rights. Authoritie­s are urged to step up law enforcemen­t in online shopping, import and export sectors targeting intellectu­al property rights infringeme­nts.

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