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    Cabinet acts to reduce red tape

    2013-05-17 08:29 China Daily     Web Editor: Sun Tian comment

    Approval needed for some items to be delegated to lower levels

    The State Council, China's cabinet, on Thursday published a list of items that no longer require central government approval, or have been delegated to lower-level authorities.

    The cabinet's list follows Premier Li Keqiang's pledge to streamline the government since he took office in March.

    Approval required for 133 types of undertakings was either surrendered to the market or delegated to lower levels.

    Of the 133 approval requirements to be canceled, 117 were posted on the government website, while the remaining 16 are pending law amendments or remain State secrets.

    Approval is no longer required from central government agencies for activities ranging from foreigners touring China in their own vehicles to companies investing in large oil and gas fields.

    Investors will also no longer need to gain administrative approval for exploration and development of new oil and gas fields.

    The changes were welcomed by economists as an effort to lower the threshold for investors to enter more industries, which may in turn raise their enthusiasm and help spur economic development.

    Niu Li, senior economist with the State Information Center, a government think tank, said reduction and decentralization of approval is a key part of the government's roadmap for progress on China's economic reform.

    Thursday's announcement "is a good sign for both domestic and international investors", and is likely to "unleash new energy at corporate level," Niu said.

    Ding Ningning, researcher with the State Council Development Research Center, said cutting the central government's approval power will help it become more efficient in macroeconomic management, and will provide a better service to the market and society.

    Government ministries have only limited staff and limited time to do their jobs. Too many approval papers will use resources that should have been committed to policy-level research, he said.

    The National Development and Reform Commission saw the deepest reduction in its approval authority, relinquishing 26 business activities, including expansion of civilian airports, ethylene or paraxylene plants, paper pulp manufacturing, and the production of sugar and polyester.

    Such projects can still be regulated by industrial policies, technology standards and economic laws, a commission official said.

    A host of items previously subject to central government approval are to be delegated to local governments, including investment in wind power plants, hydropower stations on some rivers, potash fertilizer plants, rare earth processing mills and construction of oil and gas pipelines within a province.

    The items also include charging of administrative fees and conferring of government awards.

    Premier Li said earlier he will cut at least one-third of the State Council's 1,700 approval requirements in five years.

    On May 13, in his speech at a high-level videophone conference, he insisted that streamlining of the cabinet will continue — just as "an arrow sees no return once it is shot from the bow".

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