New rules to help private businesses By Sun Shangwu (China Daily) Updated: 2005-06-07 00:28
Efforts are being stepped up to remove legal hurdles hindering the
development of China's 3.4 million private enterprises.
|
Job-searchers crowd to make registration as 120
local private businesses in Jiaxing, Zhejiang Province, open up job
vacancies. The photo is taken on February 25, 2005.
[newsphoto] | Officials with the Law
Department of the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce (ACFIC) said
yesterday that some of the country's laws and regulations conflict with central
government efforts to allow private enterprises achieve their potential.
The State Council freed-up operations of private companies, responsible for
employing at least 47 million people, in a number of industries in February.
Directives allowed private companies to enter previously State-monopolized
sectors like the railways, civil aviation and even national defence and also
gave them easier access to bank loans.
"However, some laws and regulations, in effect, contradict the spirit of the
cabinet's decision, and examples can be found everywhere," said an ACFIC
official.
One example of the contradictions is that Interim Rules on Private
Enterprises, released by the State Council in 1988, clearly bar private
companies from the military industry and finance sectors. Under the new policy,
private companies are allowed to bid for some military projects.
Corporate Law also says that only State-owned enterprises are allowed to
manufacture "special products," such as weapons.
The Supreme People's Court's judicial interpretation in 1999, banning private
companies from seeking investment from individuals, is also a case in point.
The ACFIC official, who preferred to be unnamed, said the federation is
dispatching teams to seven provinces to find out how serious the problem is and
what the best solution would be.
The federation is expected to submit proposals on amending relevant laws and
regulations to both the central government and the law-making National People's
Congress (NPC) after the survey is completed in June.
China enshrined individual property rights in the constitution last March,
and declared them "inviolable."
Xu Jian, an official with the NPC's Financial and Economic Committee, said
yesterday that a systematic law revamp is unlikely in the near future because
legislation usually lags behind policy making.
He suggested, instead, that government departments revise their regulations
and rules to remove restrictions on the development of private enterprises.
When conditions are ripe, the NPC could revamp or draft relevant laws, he
added.
Level playing field
The Corporate Law is expected to be revised at the year-end to reflect the
reality of the situation and current policies, said Xu.
The law will ensure a level playing field for all companies in China so they
can compete effectively in the market, he noted.
Xu Kun, who owns several private companies in Shanghai, and Guizhou and
Zhejiang provinces, said government departments should speed up revision of
outdated regulations.
"I would like the central government to incorporate the changes in its 11th
Five-Year Plan (2006-10)," said the businessman.
If the changes are included in the five-year plan, the central government can
prod government departments to make revisions earlier, he said.
|