China unveils first regulation on improving business environment
By Li Xinping, Wei Zhezhe, People’s Daily
China treats all domestic and foreign enterprises equally, and welcomes
companies from around the world to expand trade and investment for mutual
benefit and win-win results, said an official from the country’s top economic
planner.
Ning Jizhe, deputy head of the National Development and Reform
Commission, made the remarks while elaborating on the country’s first
regulation on optimizing business environment at a news conference held by the
State Council Information Office on October 23.
What’s special about the regulation? What does it mean for companies in
China?
The regulation establishes basic institutional norms in business
environment that give equal treatment to domestic and foreign enterprises, and
specifies the principles and directions for fostering a stable, fair,
transparent and predictable business environment.
It generalizes and outlines rules on optimizing business environment. The
regulation does not include rules for management of specific industries and
fields. Meanwhile, it leaves plenty of room for government departments at
different levels to explore suitable measures to improve business environment.
China sees an improving business environment in recent years. It has
slashed the number of items subject to administrative approval and lowered the
threshold of market access.
Starting this year, the country reduced the items on the negative lists
for foreign investment market access in pilot Free Trade Zones and the rest of
the country, and rolled out 11 measures to boost opening up of the service
industry, manufacturing and mining.
Through simplifying approval procedures, country has improved the
efficiency for establishing a business, application and installation for water
and electricity facilities and real estate registration by more than 50
percent.
The country has further cut taxes and fees, significantly reducing
corporate burden. It has also made marked progress in intellectual property
rights (IPR) protection.
In the first half of the year, Chinese courts at all levels concluded more
than 150,000 cases related to IPR of first instance, an increase of 80 percent
year on year, and more than 2,000 criminal cases concerning IPR of first
instance, 23 percent more than the same period last year.
The regulation, which institutionalizes the requirements in building a
new system of open economy from all aspects and underscores opening up,
provides a legal support for the country to ease market access and better
develop an open economy at a higher level.
The country will take efforts to build a market-oriented and
international business environment which is based on the rule of law, treat all
companies as equals, and actively promote foreign investment, according to the
regulation.
The country also pledges to give equal treatment to Chinese and foreign
companies in terms of IPR protection and protect trade secrets. It holds zero
tolerance on forced technology transfer and will punish any violations through
legal channels.
The regulation stipulates that the state shall provide an open market
for fair competition and ensure all market entities can make equal use of all
factors of production. Meanwhile, it also stipulates that all market entities
should abide by prevailing international rules while carrying out economic and
trade activities in China.
These rules put a greater emphasis on protecting legitimate rights and interests
of foreign companies, Ning pointed out.
He disclosed that the country will unveil a set of policy measures on
IPR protection.
China will set up standards on identifying patent, trademark and
copyright infringements, strengthen campaign against IPR violations and impose
heavy penalties on all types of breaches.
Meanwhile, the country will advance the process of revising the Patent
Law, the Copyright Law, the new round of comprehensive revision of the
Trademark Law, the revision of the Implementing Regulations of the Patent Law,
and the revision of the regulation on the protection of new varieties of
plants.
It will also set up a punitive damage system for infringements on
intellectual property.
The country will improve services and speed up construction of a patent
review system and a trademark registration system. It plans to cut the review
period of high-value patents to 17.5 months and shorten the trademark review
period to 5 months by the end of the year.
members handle the services in the Center for Rapid Intellectual Rights Protection in Yiwu, east China's Zhejiang province on November 21, 2018, the day when the center went into operation. The service window for Madrid International Registration of Trademark went into operation on the same day. (Gong Xianming/People’s Daily Online)
China unveils first regulation on improving business environment
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