Under the regulation approved on May 19 by the State Council, or
the central Chinese government, State-owned, private and other
companies are urged to engage in grain trading business to promote
fair competition, while efforts to hinder free trading through
illegal means are prohibited.
The State-owned grain trading firms, which dominate the grain
market, are asked to transform their business mechanism, improve
their market competitiveness, and continue to play the leading role
as the main distribution channel of grain and take the lead in
following the government's grain policies, according to the
regulation.
The regulation stipulates that grain prices should be decided by
the market, and grain dealers should follow the guidelines of free
will, fair trading and honesty, and should not harm the legitimate
rights and interests of grain growers and consumers and the
national, social and public interests in trading activities.
Premier Wen Jiabao signed a decree on May 26 to make public the
regulation, which comprises 54 articles with six chapters.
According to the decree, two 1998 regulations issued by the State
Council on grain purchase and penalizing illegal grain deals will
be abrogated as the new regulation goes into effect.
Addressing a two-day national meeting that ended here Tuesday, the
premier listed liberalization of grain trading and pricing and
offering subsidies to grain growers as among China's priority tasks
for reforming its grain distributing system.
It
is high time for China to liberalize grain trading in major
grain-producing areas, and efforts should be made to improve the
grain pricing mechanism and set up a unified, national, open, and
competitive grain market, Wen noted.
As
of this year, added the premier, China would introduce a system
across the country to offer subsidies directly to grain growers in
leading grain-producing areas so as to encourage them to grow more
grain.
The reform would give scope to a positive role in encouraging grain
production, raising farmers' income, stabilizing the grain market,
and ensuring national food security.
(Xinhua News Agency June 4, 2004)
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