Top provincial officials in China's hinterland yesterday confirmed
that the overhaul in legal and administrative processes will be top
of their working agenda in the next couple of years.
They said at the Western Forum of China that efforts were in full
swing to crack down on random administrative charges, build up
business credits and revamp regulations in favour of foreign
business.
Shaanxi Province and Chongqing Municipality cut almost half their
red-tape, trimmed redundant offices and curbed unreasonable levies
at the beginning of this year while increasing access for foreign
businesses to lodge their complaints.
Similar changes are also being carried out by other members of the
hinterland belt, officials said.
Zhao Gongqing, vice-mayor of Chongqing, said justice and credit
were the most pressing issues facing the western regions.
"Some foreign investors are hit by breaches of contract by their
Chinese partners or duped by some profiteers, as their interests
are not addressed well by the current legal framework," said Zhao,
also an economic expert.
"We need to redress the laws to incorporate their vested
interests."
Meanwhile, a reliable credit culture is desired but far from
becoming reality.
The unified call signalled a sea change in thought among provincial
heads who have been under fire for an overwhelming reliance of tax
cuts and preferential policies from Beijing.
Top policy-makers on the go-west campaign have urged local chiefs
to centre on those concerns which have been isolated as the biggest
obstacles preventing investment in the hinterland.
The region, covering 70 percent of China's land, needs foreign
capital to boost the year-old economic expansion scheme and bring
300 million residents into prosperity.
"Without a good credit system, how can you convince your guest to
do business with you?" said Wang Shouting, executive vice-governor
of Southwest China's Guizhou Province.
The western region has pinned high hopes on the "go-west" campaign
- spearheaded by the central authorities - to reinvigorate its
sluggish economy, where per capita GDP is only one eighth of that
of Shanghai or Beijing.
(China Daily 09/05/2001)
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