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Monday, 30 September 2013

Experimental Free-Trade Zone Opens in Shanghai

SHANGHAI — China opened a new type of free-trade zone here on Sunday in a bid to test financial changes that the government said could eventually spread to other parts of the country.


The new zone, which has the backing of the State Council, the Chinese cabinet, was first announced last July. It is expected to allow banks and other businesses within its boundaries to experiment in areas that are tightly controlled in China, including loosening regulation of interest rates and full convertibility of nation’s currency, the renminbi.


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David Barboza, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/anYTsPS42Ig/

China Ban on Items for Nuclear Use to North Korea May Stall Arms Bid

North Korea became even more of an outlier last week. China, its longtime patron, produced a list of equipment and chemical substances it banned for export to North Korea, fearing that the North would use the items to speed development of an intercontinental ballistic missile with a nuclear bomb on top.


The publication of the 236-page list of banned items came as a surprise to many who follow North Korea and China, given China’s longstanding reluctance to do anything that might destabilize the North and allow the United States any more power on the Korean Peninsula.


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Jane Perlez, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/IkEf2nU5lds/

China to offer tax breaks to solar power manufacturers

(Reuters) – China’s Ministry of Finance announced it will offer tax breaks to manufacturers of solar power products on Sunday, as China moves to support an industry still struggling to deal with massive overcapacity and weak demand.


The ministry said in a short statement on its website that producers of solar power products will receive immediate refunds of 50 percent of value-added taxes.


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Pete Sweeney, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/_cIG_O7OXHc/

Chinese Banker Jailed for Housing Scheme

A Chinese banking official who allegedly resorted to forgery to amass a fortune in apartments in a nation where many can’t afford a single residence, will spend the next three years in jail, a court ruled on Sunday.


Gong Aiai, a 49-year-old former deputy head of Shenmu County Rural Commercial Bank in the city of Yulin in Shaanxi province, illegally purchased and forged identification documents to help build a portfolio of at least 44 apartments worth 395 million yuan (around $65 million), the official Xinhua news agency reported.


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Sunday, 29 September 2013

China issues cultural policies for FTZ in Shanghai

China’s Ministry of Culture on Sunday published a couple of readjustments on policies regarding the cultural sector in the pilot free trade zone in Shanghai, which was officially inaugurated in this eastern Chinese municipality on the same day.


Foreign-funded art performance institutions will be allowed to set up in the zone, no matter whether they are Sino-foreign joint ventures, Sino-foreign cooperative firms or solely foreign-funded ones, according to the new policies. Foreign investors will also be allowed to invest in performance agencies.


The new policies will open up the zone to foreign operators of overseas-funded recreational facilities, provided they follow the country’s regulations on recreational places.


The third major policy change is that foreign game machine manufacturers will be eligible to sell their products in China, merely via their entities registered in the zone. These companies have to apply for official approval about the appearance, the content, and the method of playing the games before they are sold on the domestic market.


The new policies are applicable for investors from the country’s Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions and Taiwan, as well as those living abroad.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/entrKLknGPY/

Policies to boost Shanghai FTZ capital market

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s top securities regulator, has issued a package of policies to support the capital market in the Shanghai pilot free trade zone (FTZ), officials said on Sunday.


Qualified individuals and units, including financial institutes and companies, in the FTZ will be allowed to invest in both domestic and foreign fund markets, said Dai Haibo, deputy director of the zone’s administrative committee, citing a CSRC statement.


The CSRC has also approved a plan to build an international crude oil futures trading platform, while foreign companies in the zone will be allowed to issue Renminbi bonds.


Other measures include allowing securities and futures companies in the zone to set up subsidiaries and do over-the-counter trading in staple commodities and financial derivatives for domestic customers, Dai said.


China on Sunday opened a pilot free trade zone in Shanghai, which will be a test bed for a wide range of market-oriented reforms, including easing restrictions on finance, investment and trade, a move widely hailed as a crucial step in the country’s reform and opening up.






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China unveils reform details in Shanghai FTZ

China on Friday unveiled the blueprint for its pilot free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai with a detailed list of reform tasks, easing restrictions on the yuan, investment and trade to spearhead the nation’s future reforms.


The wide range of reforms will start as of Sunday when the zone is officially inaugurated.


China aims to lift the zone up to international standards featuring convenient investment and trade, free exchange of currencies, efficient supervision and a sound legal environment after two to three years of tests, according to the detailed plan published on the government’s website.


DEEPENING FINANCIAL REFORMS


“Under the precondition that risk can be controlled, China will create conditions to test yuan convertibility under the capital account, market-set interest rates and cross-border use of the Chinese currency in the zone,” the long-anticipated plan said.


The FTZ will allow the market to decide prices of financial institutions’ assets, a process known as the securitization of those assets, as policymakers hope to catalyze further reforms in the world’s second-largest economy through such an experiment.


Chinese banks in the zone will be permitted to conduct offshore business on the condition of effective oversight, under the plan. It means Chinese banks will be allowed to provide services to depositors who are residents in other countries.


The Shanghai FTZ will also allow eligible foreign-funded financial institutions to set up banks, and to team up with qualified private banks to establish joint-ventures.


The plan also pledged to establish a foreign exchange management mechanism adaptable to trade and investment reforms in the zone.


Enterprises can try the free cross-border financing while multinationals are encouraged to establish regional or global capital management centers in the zone.


The FTZ will also push for “a full-scale opening” of the financial service sector to eligible private capital and foreign financial institutions.


Foreign companies are permitted to gradually participate in commodities futures trading in the zone.


EASIER INVESTMENT ACCESS


The FTZ will suspend or scrap some previous access control concerning investor quality, investors’ equity ratio, and fields eligible for investment, according to the plan.


A negative list approach will be explored in the zone, and foreign investors there will have no need of government approval before setting up, so long as they formalize their arrangements after the fact, and do not operate in any sectors on a “negative list.”


Meanwhile, 18 service sectors will open wider to foreign and private capital ranging from finance, shipping, commerce to culture.


Foreign companies will be permitted to conduct “a portion of specific types of telecommunications value-added business on condition of ensuring information security.”


Specifically, this means foreign companies could establish call centers, provide Internet information and related software technology services in the pilot zone.


They are also allowed to produce and sell video game gadgets in China, providing the contents pass the country’s censorship.


In addition, foreign travel agencies registered in the FTZ can conduct overseas trip business except to Taiwan. Entertainment agencies will be allowed, for the first time, to solely provide performance brokerage business in Shanghai.


Foreign companies could also team up with Chinese partners to open educational and vocational training, provide healthcare insurance services, and establish independent medical institutions.


“The highlight of the Shanghai FTZ is that it is an open platform where foreign and Chinese companies can compete on a level-playing field,” said Shen Minggao, chief economist at Citibank.


FAVORABLE TAX TREATMENT


Taxation policies that seek to boost investment and trade will be implemented in the zone, according to the plan.


Companies and individuals can pay income taxes by installment for the added value from non-currency asset outbound investment.


Subsidiary firms established by zone-based financial leasing companies (FLC) will be included in the tax rebate program. The FLCs registered in the zone will also enjoy favorable policies on value-added tax for import of planes with a net weight of above 25 tonnes, the plan said.


It added that tax exemption will be granted to companies registered in the zone concerning their imports of machines and equipment for production.


The State Council approved the pilot decision on July 3. Covering almost 29 square km, the zone will be modeled on existing free trade businesses in the country’s economic hubs — Waigaoqiao Bonded Area, Waigaoqiao Bonded Logistics Park, Yangshan Bonded Port Area and Pudong Airport Comprehensive Bonded Area.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/nsruFKBLgCE/

Friday, 27 September 2013

U.S., China want quick, binding U.N. resolution on Syria, U.S. says

The United States and China strongly agree on the need for the U.N. Security Council to quickly adopt a binding resolution on eradicating Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday in remarks that appeared aimed at putting pressure on Russia to accept the measure.


Russia appeared unswayed. When asked if diplomats were close to a deal on a Syria resolution, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters at the United Nations, “Russia’s very close, the U.S. is not.”


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China Looks West as It Bolsters Regional Ties

ASTANA, Kazakhstan — President Xi Jinping of China, evoking the camel caravans of the old Silk Road that traversed the ancient plains of Kazakhstan on their way from China to Europe, said Saturday that he wanted to create a contemporary version that would bind together China and its Central Asian neighbors.


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Jane Perlez, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/Ui0IJJA81n4/

Click here for more information Explore real-time news, visually Japan PM: China vessels still intruding in Japanese waters, but door remains open to dialogue

Japan’s prime minister says Chinese government vessels are still intruding into Japanese territorial waters around contested islands, but he says the door to dialogue with Beijing is always open.


The Asian powers’ conflicting claims to the remote islands, called Senkaku by Japan and Diaoyu by China, have badly strained relations. China says it, too, is ready to talk, but only if Japan formally acknowledges disputed sovereignty.


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China Unveils Rules for Shanghai Free-Trade Zone

BEIJING—China announced long-awaited rules for a new free-trade zone in Shanghai, pledging to ease restrictions on the service and financial sectors and positioning the zone as a testing ground for reform at a time of slower economic growth.


The free-trade zone, a project that has been pushed by Shanghai and proponents of reform in the central government, had been hailed as a major step in opening up areas of the economy to more competition and private capital.


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Karzai meets China leaders to boost cooperation amid security concerns delaying mining project

Afghan President Hamid Karzai met Friday with Chinese leaders amid security threats in the war-torn nation that have stymied a massive copper mine development by a Chinese consortium.


Karzai met separately with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang at Beijing’s Great Hall of the people, and the situation at the Aynak mine south of Kabul was expected to have featured prominently in the talks.


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Promising outlook for foreign banks in FTZ

The Shanghai Free Trade Zone could prove a game-changer for foreign banks that are struggling in China by creating an offshore financial market where they can put their expertise to good use, according to a leading domestic economist.


“Eventually, all kinds of financial transactions that can be conducted in the international market will be permitted for banks inside the Shanghai FTZ,” Lian Ping, chief economist with the Bank of Communications, told China Daily by phone.


“The area will be an offshore financial market where they can do business with the entire world,” he said.


A number of domestic and foreign financial institutions are reportedly eager to set up shop in the 28.78-sq-km zone, which is expected to be officially unveiled on Sunday. It is being billed as a test bed for financial reforms that will later be applied more broadly in China.


Shanghai Pudong Development Bank already has three branches in the FTZ area but it plans to upgrade these and put them under the direct management of its head office. Bank of China has also applied to upgrade it branches in the area.


Meanwhile, foreign players like BEA, Citigroup, HSBC and Standard Chartered are closely watching to see what business opportunities emerge in the FTZ.


Lian said the zone will lure new players to the Chinese market, including those funded by private capital – although the latter will only be allowed to conduct offshore business initially.


“Competition will be fierce because financial institutions will rush into the area with a range of innovative products,” he said.


Pundits predict that the first set of guidelines for the FTZ, set to be released this year, will contain few reforms. But they will soon expand “because only by opening up the financial market will the FTZ achieve its original intention,” Lian said.


“Although there won’t be too many breakthroughs at first, we will see new ways of doing old businesses,” he added.


As an offshore financial market, the FTZ will remove both the ceiling on deposits for banks and the cap on loan interest rates, he said. The cap is currently set at four times the benchmark rate set by the People’s Bank of China.


The loan-to-deposit ratio, which stops commercial banks lending over 75 percent of their total deposits, may also be relaxed, he forecasts.


“Foreign banks will become more competitive in the FTZ because they are already familiar with this kind of playing field,” he said.


Foreign banks have been faltering in China because of their limited access to depositors, small branch numbers, and the impact of the strict loan-to-deposit ratio.


By Wei Tian in Shanghai ( China Daily)






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China to ease restrictions on yuan, investment, trade in Shanghai FTZ

China will experiment with a wide range of reforms, including easing restrictions on yuan, investment, trade and business management in the (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, according to a general plan published on the government website on Friday.


“Under the precondition that risk can be controlled, China will create conditions to test yuan convertibility under the capital account, market-set interest rates and cross-border use of the Chinese currency in the zone,” said the plan.


Regulations in the zone will also be eased in 18 sectors from finance, shipping, commerce to culture.


Covering almost 29 square kilometers, the zone will be created modeled on existing free trade businesses in the country’s economic hub — Waigaoqiao Free Trade Zone, Waigaoqiao Free Trade Logistics Park, Yangshan Free Trade Port Area and Pudong Airport Comprehensive Free Trade Zone.






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China adopts cautious, responsible attitude toward trade of small arms, light weapons: envoy

China adopts “a cautious and responsible attitude” toward the trade of small arms and light weapons, and is ready to work with the international community to promote a proper solution to the issue of illegitimate trade of such weapons in the world, a senior Chinese diplomat said here Thursday.


Liu Jieyi, the Chinese permanent representative to the United Nations, made the statement as he was taking the floor at a high-level meeting at the U.N. Security Council on the issue of small arms and light weapons.


“China, with a cautious and responsible attitude, strictly abides by the principles of no infringement on regional peace and stability, and non-interference of internal affairs of other countries,” Liu said, “China does not export any small arms and light weapons to any country, region or individual under the arms embargo imposed by the U.N. Security Council.”


“China has always been opposed to illicit production of and trafficking in small arms and light weapons,” Liu said, “We sympathize with the people of the concerned countries and regions who have suffered deeply as a result of the proliferation of small arms and light weapons.”


The strengthened efforts to help concerned countries develop economy, promote stability and address the root causes of conflicts, terrorism and organized crimes are conducive to the appropriate solution to the issue of small arms and light weapons, he said.


Over the years, China has been very active in rendering international cooperation and strengthened domestic regulations, thus making great contributions to the world efforts to fight the illegal trade in small arms and light weapons, he said.


The United Nations should play a dominant role in the global war against the illegitimate trade of small arms and light weapons, he added.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/vSh7zahFP84/

Silk Road economic belt focus of Euro-Asia forum

The fifth Euro-Asia Economic Forum opened here on Thursday with the Silk Road economic belt high on the agenda.


Chinese President Xi Jinping’s proposal for the Silk Road belt has brought unprecedented opportunities for regional development, said Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang at the opening ceremony of the forum.


Eurasian countries should push forward with more, higher level, broader regional cooperation, with a firmer resolve and more practical measures, to make the idea a reality as soon as possible for the benefit of the people, said Wang in his keynote speech.


He stressed mutual political trust and common development in the region, calling for opening up and fighting protectionism in all forms, promoting mutual understanding and deepening friendship by expanding exchanges in education, culture and tourism.


The three-day conference in Xi’an, capital of northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, attracted about 2,000 delegates from 75 countries, regions and international organizations, including foreign leaders such as Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Ukrainian First Vice Prime Minister Serhiy Arbuzov.


Themed “deepening pragmatic cooperation and promote common prosperity”, the forum features eight main seminars on cultural heritage, ecological safety, economic growth, education, energy development, financial cooperation, new technology and tourism development.


Afghanistan supports Silk Road economic belt proposal and wants to be part of regional cooperation, said Karzai at the opening ceremony.


During his visit to Kazakhstan in early September, Chinese President Xi Jinping put forward the proposal of a Silk Road economic belt to deepen cooperation and make economic ties closer among European and Asian nations.


The Silk Road refers to the land trade route opened when Zhang Qian was sent west on a diplomatic mission more than 2,000 years ago. Starting from the city known today as Xi’an, the ancient Silk Road ran through northwest China’s Gansu Province and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and Central and Western Asia, before reaching the Mediterranean.


China remains a developing center to the whole world and China’s development brings opportunities to other countries, said Serhiy Arbuzov.


Shaanxi, near the geographical center of China, plays an important role in China’s opening up to the West, said Governor Lou Qinjian.


The province will focus on its distinctive industries and realize win-win outcomes with Eurasian countries, said Lou.


Xing Guangcheng, researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the Silk Road economic belt could take a long time and it is important to strengthen exchanges and build mutual trust.


The Silk Road is not only a trade route, but also a route of culture and peace. The Euro-Asia Economic Forum serves as a good platform for communication, but more exchange and cooperation are necessary, said Sun Zhuangzhi, another expert in Central Asia studies.


Currently, infrastructure along the Silk Road such as roads and pipelines have been initially completed, but more effort in mechanisms for trade and investment are needed, said Feng Zongxian, an professor of economics at Xi’an Jiaotong University.


A vital precondition is for countries to have an open, inclusive and win-win mindset, said Feng.






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New legal era for Shanghai trade zone

Move aimed at ‘seamless transition’ ahead of official launch on Sunday


The municipal legislature of Shanghai on Thursday endorsed the legal framework for the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, paving the way for the official launch on Sunday, when the first batch of new laws and regulations are expected to be announced.


The Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Congress said in a statement that it decided to adjust some of its local regulations and suspend the 1996 Regulations on Examination and Approval of Foreign Investment Enterprises of Shanghai Municipality, which are expected to be superseded by the new zone’s regulations.


The statement said that the suspension wouldn’t create a legal vacuum, because every effort would be made to ensure a seamless transition.


Foreign business executives said they welcomed the proposed changes and looked forward to an even more efficient regulatory environment.


Calling the general business environment the top factor in attracting foreign investment, Anders Paulsson, a partner at the Shanghai-based consulting firm SmithStreet, said the FTZ is expected to provide more business opportunities.


“Foreign enterprises will be given pre-establishment national treatment — treated the same as Chinese companies. Foreign investment will also be evaluated with a ‘negative’ list approach as opposed to a ‘positive’ list approach,” said Jian Chang, an economist at Barclays China.


In a “negative” list approach, any industry that is not on the list is open to foreign investment.


“This new approach would greatly simplify the process because few industries are expected to be on the negative list,” said Chang.


Although the ban on foreign capital in such industries as telecommunications is unlikely to be lifted, Yang Yuyi, an attorney at the Jingtian & Gongcheng Law Firm’s Shanghai branch, said that the review and approval procedures for other sectors, including healthcare, have become more open and easier for foreign capital. It can be assumed that the FTZ will offer even easier procedures, she said.


By SHI JING ( China Daily)






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Tianjin pioneers China’s new round of reform

Tianjin municipality announced on Thursday that it has streamlined institutional committees in three districts of Binhai New Area (BNA), making it a spearhead for China’s new round of administrative reform.


Tianjin canceled the administrative committees of all three districts in the Binhai area and allowed the BNA government to deal directly with public affairs.


Fifty-one bureau-level officials of the administrative committees in Tanggu, Hangu and Dagang districts will be transferred to other positions by the end of this year. These administrative committees were set up in October 2009 as part of the BNA’s initial institutional reform.


Yuan Tongli, Communist Party chief of the Binhai area, said loopholes due to over administration and inconsistent procedures have emerged since 2009.


With an area of 2,270 square km and a population of 1.4 million, the BNA has championed reform in administration and social management, land management and finance innovation. The finance lease business there accounts for a quarter of China’s total.


This unprecedented round, involving most departments and great personnel reduction, chimes with a call by the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee in August to transform local governments and push forward institutional reform.


A streamlined administrative system with Chinese characteristics will dovetail with the central government’s efforts. Tianjin is made to pioneer the campaign.


“The approval of a Free Trade Area in Shanghai has stimulated Tianjin to speed up its reform, liberalizing the economy from within through institutional reform,” said Zhou Liqun, deputy dean of Binhai Development and Research Institute of Nankai University.


In line with government plan, the BNA will steadily and sustainably develop institutional and systematic innovation, Zhou said.


“Reform of the Binhai New Area is a significant example for other regions in this regard,” said Xiao Jincheng, deputy director of Institute of Spatial Planning & Regional Economy of National Development and Reform Commission.


“Past reform was mere organizational adjustment. This time Binhai has touched upon individual interests by reducing personnel,” Xiao said, explaining that reform is not to satisfy individual interests but to improve governance and social justice.






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Philippines-US drill raises concern

China urged regional countries not to act recklessly with the support of parties outside the region, referring to recent joint exercises between the United States and the Philippines near the South China Sea.


“Peace, stability and prosperity are desired by people in the region and need to be maintained by all relevant parties,” Ministry of National Defense spokesman Geng Yansheng said on Thursday at a monthly news conference.


“Parties outside the region should take more action that favors peace and stability, rather than sowing dissension.”


On Sept 18, the US and the Philippines began a three-week military drill near the South China Sea.


The drill is part of Manila’s effort to get US help in strengthening its maritime forces so that the Philippines will be in a stronger position when bargaining with China on South China Sea territorial issues, Agence France-Presse reported.


In addition, a Wall Street Journal report said that the Philippines looks forward to reopening the former Subic Bay US naval base to US forces to counter Chinese moves in the South China Sea.


Washington should mind the risk of an increased military presence in the Asia-Pacific region, said Chen Qinghong, a researcher on Philippine studies with the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations.


“An increased military presence will cause instability and add more uncertainties to the region,” he said.


Xu Liping, a researcher on Asia-Pacific studies with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that neither the Philippines nor others outside the region should underestimate Beijing’s determination to safeguard its sovereignty in the South China Sea.


“Looking at the bigger picture, China exercised restraint in dealing with the issue, but Manila should not misunderstand China’s restraint as weakness,” he said. Manila and those outside the region should value China’s efforts to maintain peace and stability in the South China Sea, he added.


Geng also introduced the training plan for China’s first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning.


The Liaoning will sail further offshore within China’s maritime territory for military training in the future, the spokesman said.


“But the carrier is still in an experimental stage,” he added.


The Liaoning marked the first anniversary of its commissioning on Wednesday.


Nuclear arsenal


Referring to a recent report by a US institute that said China’s nuclear arsenal has already surpassed the United Kingdom’s, Geng reiterated that China remains restrained in maintaining nuclear weapons.


“China has never participated in and will not participate in nuclear competition,” Geng said. China has reduced its nuclear forces to the lowest level necessary to safeguard national security, he added.


In other matters, Geng said the Chinese army will do its best to provide relief assistance to Pakistan in the wake of the country’s magnitude-7.7 earthquake on Tuesday, which killed at least 384 people in the southwest province of Balochistan.


By ZHOU WA ( China Daily)






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China to join talks on trade in services

Plan complies with need for economic restructuring, says spokesman


China will soon join the negotiations for an agreement on trade in services, a Ministry of Commerce spokesman said on Thursday.


“Consensus has been reached at home on joining the talks. It won’t be long before China participates in the negotiations, and ministers from China and the United States have already consulted each other on the issue,” Yao Jian said during a news briefing. But he added it’s hard to say when the pact can be reached.


The Trade in Services Agreement was led by the United States and the European Union, along with more than two dozen economies. The talks were launched last year to break the stalemate in the World Trade Organization talks.


Trade in services refers to the sale and delivery of an intangible product, such as tourism, financial services and telecommunications services.


China’s trade in services has developed rapidly in recent years, and the talks are expected to boost development of global trade in services.


“As for China, the services sector is an important driver of economic growth and is of great significance for the next step in economic restructuring. It’s natural for China to watch the Trade in Services Agreement talks. It will be a win-win result if China’s trade service development can join that of the world,” Yao said.


The services sector accounted for 44 percent of China’s GDP, much lower than in developed economies, which are above 70 percent, according to Yao.


“We must speed up the development of services,” Yao said.


He said China’s participation in the talks will be positive for the negotiations.


China’s trade in services rose 12.3 percent year-on-year to $470 billion in 2012, accounting for 5.6 percent of the world’s total and ranking third in the world, according to the WTO.


“China’s stance in joining the Trade in Services Agreement is related to the leadership’s new round of reforms and opening-up, and is surely good news for advancing economic restructuring. It will help unleash the potential in the services sector and boost domestic consumption,” said Lu Feng, deputy head of the National School of Development at Peking University.


Lu added that China will be more active in setting global trade rules.


Huo Jianguo, president of the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, a think tank under the ministry, said that participation in the talks will help China better integrate into the global economy and open the services sector wider.


“But the negotiations over the Trade in Services Agreement will undoubtedly be difficult,” Huo said.






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Thursday, 26 September 2013

U.S., China want quick, binding U.N. resolution on Syria, U.S. says

The United States and China strongly agree on the need for the U.N. Security Council to quickly adopt a binding resolution on eradicating Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday in remarks that appeared aimed at putting pressure on Russia to accept the measure.


Russia appeared unswayed. When asked if diplomats were close to a deal on a Syria resolution, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters at the United Nations, “Russia’s very close, the U.S. is not.”


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China to launch space station by 2023

China expects to complete its first orbiting space station within a decade.


The station, in low-Earth orbit, will be able to support six crew on short-term missions and three for long-term stays.


Its design consists of three capsules – a core module attached to two laboratories – with a cargo vessel to transport supplies.


The 2023 launch target was revealed at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Beijing.


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Russia, China hold large-scale war games

Pentagon intelligence agencies are closely watching Russian and Chinese war games now taking place in Europe and Asia involving tens of thousands of troops.


Meanwhile, NATO military forces are set to conduct large-scale maneuvers in November that will be designed to counter growing concerns of a westward Russian military encroachment, according to U.S. officials.


“The Russians are moving forces closer to Europe, and that is troubling,” said a military official.


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Pursuing Graft Cases at Higher Levels, Chinese Leader Risks Unsettling Elites

Shortly before his retirement late last year, Zhou Yongkang, the longtime chief of China’s domestic security apparatus, visited an office of the state oil company where he had started his ascent in the Communist Party hierarchy. He spoke of his undimmed devotion to the company, China National Petroleum Corporation, and to his fellow oilmen.


“Oil is a word that stays in an oilman’s heart for his whole life,” Mr. Zhou said in his valedictory.


A year later, senior officials associated with the oil conglomerate, including longtime allies of Mr. Zhou’s, are enmeshed in spreading corruption inquiries, presenting China’s new leader, Xi Jinping, with one of his biggest tests so far: How far and high is he willing to go to clean up China’s political elite?


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China thermal coal futures make strong debut

China’s first thermal coal futures contract debuted as one of the most heavily traded contracts on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange on Thursday as miners, traders and investors were eager to trade it.


Although China is the world’s top coal consumer and producer, its coal derivatives market is relatively undeveloped, and there is growing demand for hedging tools, particularly given that domestic coal prices have fallen steeply this year.


The rollout of China’s first thermal coal contract will also give Beijing greater influence over global prices, analysts said. The move comes as China looks to gradually open up its financial sector in a drive to make economic growth more consumption-oriented.


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Fayen Wong, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/MFcEvmIB6sw/

Shuanghui wraps up Smithfield deal, China’s largest US takeover

Calling it a “great transaction” for shareholders, United States farmers and agriculture, Smithfield Foods Inc Chief Executive Officer Larry Pope announced that shareholders had approved the pork giant’s acquisition by Shuanghui International Holdings Ltd, the biggest Chinese takeover ever of a US company.


“The partnership is all about growth, and about doing more business at home and abroad,” Pope said Tuesday of the $4.7 billion acquisition, and he promised to keep things “business as usual — only better” at Smithfield.


More than 96 percent of the votes cast backed the transaction, representing about 76 percent of the company’s outstanding stock, Smithfield said.


The acquisition, valued at $7.1 billion including debt, is expected to formally close by Thursday, after which the Virginia-based company’s New York Stock Exchange-listed shares will cease to trade publicly, it said. The world’s largest pork processor will then begin to operate as a wholly owned Shuanghui unit.


The Smithfield acquisition is China’s largest cross-border deal since CNOOC Ltd paid $15.1 billion last year for Canadian oil and gas producer Nexen Ltd.


Shuanghui, China’s biggest meat processor, will pay Smithfield shareholders $34 cash for each share held, a 31 percent premium to the price when the deal was announced in May.


Proxy advisory firms Glass Lewis & Co and Institutional Shareholder Services had recommended that Smithfield shareholders back the deal.


Unhappy with the offer, New York hedge fund Starboard Value LP, a 5.7 percent Smithfield stakeholder, had said it would vote against the transaction if it could not find a more lucrative alternative offer.


Starboard reversed course last week and said it would vote for the acquisition after failing to find a more lucrative alternative bid.


The proposed acquisition sparked debate over the deal’s implications for US food safety.


Both companies asserted the merger was driven by growing pork demand in China and not a strategy to export pork to the US. The merger failed to raise antitrust concerns because it doesn’t give Smithfield — already the world’s largest hog farmer and pork producer — a larger share of the US pork market.


Two weeks ago, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, an inter-agency committee of the US government that reviews foreign purchases for national-security implications, approved the transaction at the end of an extended 45-day investigation, clearing the way for the shareholder vote.


Some analysts predict the Smithfield deal will be a watershed event that will lead to more transactions tied to an ambitious effort by Beijing to obtain raw materials and technology needed to run China’s growing economy.


China’s robust growth over the past three decades, putting it on course to overtake the US as the world’s largest economy by 2020, has been accompanied by problems with food security and safety, as well as environmental pollution and healthcare.


Erik Gordon, a law professor at the University of Michigan Law School and Ross School of Business, told China Daily that any unexpected developments tied to the deal in the next five years could affect the outlook for future Chinese acquisitions in the US.


More deals could be in the offing “if Smithfield works out well for the Americans over the next five years”, Gordon said.


But “if Americans are fired, if Smithfield refuses to disclose information that is customarily disclosed in the US, or if anything else that is unusual happens, it will increase the fears and suspicions,” Gordon said.


“If China wants to acquire more US companies, it will have to handle Smithfield carefully,” he said.


Smithfield and Shuanghui have said the acquisition won’t result in major changes to Smithfield’s management or workforce. Smithfield has more than 46,000 employees.


With annual revenue of $13 billion, it has facilities in 26 US states, including the world’s largest slaughterhouse and meat-processing plant, in North Carolina. It also has operations in Mexico and 10 European countries.


By MICHAEL BARRIS ( China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/CpW1Aqxed2M/

Break up of State oil monopoly?

“As a good way to form fair market competition in the petroleum sector, we should make some adjustments in the oil retailing field by stripping away the oil station business from three main State-owned oil enterprises and set up another SOE specialized in the operation of oil stations,” said Xu Baoli, director of the research center of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.


As China’s new leadership has pledged a series of economic reform plans to invigorate the economy this year, dismantling the SOEs’ monopoly in industries including petroleum, telecommunications and finance have become major targets.


During the World Economic Forum in Dalian, Liaoning province, earlier this month, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said China is now at a crucial time and the country won’t achieve sustainable economic growth without structural upgrading and transformation.


“We need to classify SOEs into competitive and non-competitive areas to deal with the so-called monopoly problem of SOEs,” said Shao Ning, SASAC’s vice-chairman.


In the service industries, which are considered a competitive area and include telecommunications and finance, a series of measures will be taken by the government to promote market access and competition.


In the domestic oil market, three main State-owned petroleum giants — China National Petroleum Corp, China Petroleum and Chemical Corp and China National Offshore Oil Corp — have dominated main business areas, including oil exploration, refining and retailing, for the past decades.


Xu said he believes that the oil station business should be made independent from CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC and more encouragement should be given to foreign and private investors to create more competition in terms of price, quality and services.


Although it was opened to foreign investors in 2004, the domestic petrol station market is still dominated by Sinopec and CNPC, both of which own more than 80 percent of the country’s petroleum retail market.


By the end of 2011, Sinopec had more than 30,000 petrol stations. By the first half of 2012, PetroChina had more than 19,000 petrol stations, accounting for about 40 percent of the market share.


Private and foreign companies planning to enter the oil station sector still face some market restrictions. Petrol station operators are required to have stable oil supplier.


Those who cooperate with CNPC and Sinopec as their oil suppliers need to provide a supply contract of more than three years to the local government in Chongqing municipality and others are required to have their own oil storage with ample reserves.


“This requirement represents a big burden for private oil station owners,” Ye Tan, a renowned financial commentator wrote in her blog.


“CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC own the franchise of oil exploration, so we can’t exclude the condition that they discriminate against downstream enterprises at the oil refining and retail segments, taking advantage of their control of the industrial upstream. When crude oil production is limited, main SOEs may decrease their supply to other refining companies, which would suffer production reductions in that case,” said Xu.


In order to ensure the safety of the non-renewable energy oil, the presence of three national petrol companies in the exploration development sector, which is considered an administrative monopoly, conforms to common international practices, according to Xu.


However, the government still needs to find ways to further ease market access in the oil refining and retailing sectors to offset the influence of the administrative monopoly in the exploration sector, Xu added.


Engaging in businesses including refining, oil chemicals, oil stations and lubricating oil in China, multinational oil and gas company Royal Dutch Shell Plc now runs more than 600 petrol stations in the market, data from the company’s website show.


Kang Yan, a senior partner at Roland Berger Strategy Consultants (Shanghai), said that Shell Oil Co has been striving to expand its petrol station network in China as part of its efforts to deepen the company’s global presence.


“This represents Shell’s decision for a long-term development in the Chinese market,” Kang added.


Shell operates its independent-branded oil stations in China through acquisition and lease deals. In addition, the company also jointly established hundreds of oil stations with Sinopec.


More competition in the industry would be beneficial because oil prices would decrease once competition becomes fierce and service at petrol stations would also improve, according to Kang.


“If all the petrol station retailers, State-run, foreign and private, could sell the finished-oil products explored by CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC, a competitive tendency would be formed among the three oil majors in the finished oil market. Each would choose oil products with low prices and good quality,” Xu said.


By Bao Chang and Du Juan ( China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/c8d_9b-iZ94/

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

U.S. Envoy Affirms Support for Universal Suffrage in Hong Kong

HONG KONG — The new top American diplomat in Hong Kong reiterated on Tuesday the United States’ support for “genuine universal suffrage” in Hong Kong, but said he would not take any position on how this should be achieved.


Clifford A. Hart Jr., the new American consul general, who arrived on July 30, said in his first public speech here, “We have no prescription for Hong Kong’s electoral process — one of the fundamental precepts of democracy is that the people themselves have a full say in how their systems work.”


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Keith Bradsher, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/7b8SeTYbeDw/

Delivery date for Chinese first homegrown jet airliner delayed, again, until mid-2014

The delivery date of China’s long-delayed first commercial jet airliner has been pushed back again, the manufacturer said Wednesday, the latest setback for China’s ambitions to challenge market leaders Boeing and Airbus.


Originally promised for 2007, the plane was most recently expected late this year, but Comac Chairman Jin Zhuanglong said it will now be ready in mid-2014.


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The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/FxD06EXo1oc/

China names five new policy advisers for central bank

China has appointed five new monetary policy advisers to its central bank, the cabinet said, the first reshuffle this year of a group that wields influence on crucial financial matters including currency and interest rate reforms.


The new advisers will join the 15-member monetary policy committee in the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the State Council said.


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Xiaoyi Shao and Koh Gui Qing, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/0rsSPacxVJ0/

China to Audit Army Staff as Anti-Graft Campaign Gains Pace

China will audit military personnel before deciding to promote them or let them retire, as the Communist Party presses ahead with a campaign to root out graft within its officer ranks.


Scrutiny will focus on areas including property holdings and the use of official vehicles, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported yesterday, citing guidelines issued by the Central Military Commission.


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Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/cE9z2LHTGxg/

China Business Leaders Meet Japan’s Top Government Spokesman

Japan’s top government spokesman met with a visiting group of Chinese business leaders today and signaled his country wants to improve the frosty relations between Asia’s two largest economies.


Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga reiterated the message that ties between the two countries have global significance and that Japan’s door is always open to dialogue, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. The visit came after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had a short conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G-20 summit in St. Petersburg earlier this month.


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Isabel Reynolds and Takashi Hirokawa, Bloomberg via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/E6oSHCxpJNc/

Fonterra to have 30 farms in China by 2020

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra is expected to have 30 farms in China with an annual production capacity of 1 billion liters of milk by 2020, a company executive said on Monday.


Fonterra, which was involved in a recent botulism scare, said it plans to intensify the promotion of its finished products in China in the latter half of the year, including introducing a baby milk powder under the Fonterra brand.


Fonterra currently has five farms in North China’s Hebei province and is planning to create a second conglomerate of farms in Yingxian county, Shanxi province, said Qin Min, vice-president of Fonterra Greater China, on Monday night.


The quality of cattle and milk at Fonterra’s Chinese farms can meet New Zealand standards, Qin said.


New Zealand has been a major provider of dairy products to China. In the first half of this year, China imported 371,000 tons of milk powder from New Zealand, accounting for 83.3 percent of the country’s total milk powder imports, according to Chinese customs data.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/zBEINnJc7io/

China seeks lessons in attracting more foreign students

Although the number of foreign students studying on the Chinese mainland has increased steadily in the past eight years, it still falls far behind the number of Chinese students going abroad, a report released on Tuesday said.


According to the Annual Report on the Development of Chinese Students Studying Abroad 2013, there were 1.14 million Chinese studying overseas last year. That compares with only 328,000 foreign students in China.


Published by the Center for China and Globalization, the report cites a study by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development done earlier this year showing that China lags behind 10 developed economies in terms of the number of international students.


The OECD said that China attracted only 1.8 percent of international university students in 2011.


The US, the top destination for international students, attracted 17.5 percent.


Only three universities on the Chinese mainland were ranked among the top 200 world-class universities, according to a worldwide university ranking in 2011-12 released by the Times Higher Education.


The report said Chinese universities are less competitive than many of their counterparts in developed economies in terms of faculty, curriculum and student management.


Liu Hong, a professor specialized in talent policies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, said the Chinese government should provide more subsidies to universities so they can recruit more global talent to improve teaching quality.


In 2010, only about 11,000 foreign teachers taught in universities on the Chinese mainland, accounting for less than 1 percent of the total faculty.


The rate was 40 to 50 percent in Hong Kong that year, the report said.


Li Siyan, marketing director of Laureate International Universities’ China region, an international higher educational organization, said, “A lot of foreign students are interested in studying in China to learn not only the Chinese language but also the business culture, as China is an increasingly important economy.”


However, some abandoned the plan after they found that the Chinese educational system is not flexible enough to allow them to choose what and where to study, he said.


But Elena Klorer, a graduate student at the Institute of Sinology in the University of Freiburg of Germany, said China provides abundant opportunities for foreign students to study in China.


“If you want to come to China, there are lots of programs and scholarships,” said Klorer, who studied at Peking University in 2009 and 2010.


She is now in Beijing doing research for her master’s thesis.


She said China will attract more foreign students if it removes policy barriers for foreign students to work in China.


The book also suggests China reform its government scholarship program, which banned recipients from taking part-time jobs or living off campus.


Wang Huiyao, director-general of the Center for China and Globalization and one of the editors of the report, said China should encourage cooperation in running universities by simplifying licensing procedures.


“Joint ventures can help boost our educational quality by introducing good overseas resources, teaching philosophies and management, which will surely attract more foreign students,” he said.


By He Dan ( China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/2lcBgMGdn4Y/

China to inaugurate Shanghai FTZ on Sept 29

China will officially launch the pilot free trade zone in Shanghai on Sept 29, taking a solid step forward to boost reforms in the world’s second-largest economy.


Preparation work is going smoothly, sources with the Shanghai municipal government said on Tuesday.


Covering almost 29 square kilometers, the zone will be created modeled on existing free trade businesses in the country’s economic hub — Waigaoqiao Free Trade Zone, Waigaoqiao Free Trade Logistics Park, Yangshan Free Trade Port Area and Pudong Airport Comprehensive Free Trade Zone.


Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said earlier this month that for the pilot FTZ, a negative list approach will be explored and priority will be given to easier investment and greater openness.


China’s legislature has given the green light to the State Council, or the Cabinet, to modify laws related to foreign enterprises in the zone.


As authorized by the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, the State Council will suspend administrative approvals covering foreign-funded enterprises, Chinese-foreign equity joint ventures and contractual joint ventures.


The State Council approved the pilot Shanghai FTZ on July 3. In the pilot zone, goods can be imported, processed and re-exported without the intervention of customs authorities.






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/SZDcdh6NnNI/

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

China issues list of items banned from export to North Korea because of potential military use

China has tightened restrictions on North Korea by issuing a long list of weapons-related technology and materials banned from export to its neighbor, reflecting Beijing’s desire to get Pyongyang to scrap its nuclear programs and rejoin disarmament talks.


The announcement posted Tuesday on the Chinese Commerce Ministry website comes as two American experts said that Pyongyang can now make crucial equipment for producing uranium-based bombs on its own, cutting out imports that had been one of the few ways outsiders could monitor the country’s secretive atomic work.


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The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/fRDn_deXWJ0/

China Gains New Friends in Its Quest for Energy

ATYRAU, Kazakhstan — On the northern reaches of the Caspian Sea, not far from this old Soviet town known for its oil and sturgeon, lies a vast new oil find, the biggest outside the Middle East. China was rebuffed when it asked for a stake 10 years ago.


But when the pumps finally started this month, the China National Petroleum Corporation had won a share in the project, known as Kashagan, and President Xi Jinping was in the region recently to celebrate, another indication that China’s influence has eclipsed even Russia’s across the former Soviet republics of Central Asia.


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Jane Perlez and Bree Feng, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/kyF4GUQQFjA/

China will unblock Facebook, Twitter and The New York Times to boost its new free trade zone

China’s ambitious Shanghai Free Trade Zone is designed to welcome foreign investment and open up an attractive yuan-denominated financial sector to the rest of the world. But it’s hard to boast about free trade credentials behind the Great Firewall of China, so media outlets and social networks that are banned elsewhere in China will be available in the zone, the South China Morning post reported today, citing unnamed government sources.


In addition, the government will consider bids from foreign telecommunications companies to provide internet service in the zone.


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Heather Timmons, Quartz via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/XZvsfQcfHfE/

China’s disgraced politician Bo Xilai appeals guilty verdict and life imprisonment

Disgraced Chinese politician Bo Xilai has appealed his guilty verdict, a person close to the case said Tuesday, in a rare move that is consistent with his defiant stance but unlikely to change the outcome.


The person with direct knowledge of the case, but who did not wish to be identified, said the former Politburo member made the appeal orally upon the delivery of the verdict issued by the Jinan Intermediate People’s Court in eastern China on Sunday.






The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/pYkV6v7nX7o/

China’s Data Suggest Rebound

BEIJING—China’s economy showed fresh signs of vigor as an initial gauge of manufacturing activity strengthened in September, reaching a six-month high.


The improved reading on the initial HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, released on Monday, reinforced expectations that the economy is continuing to gain strength after its weak first half and that the second quarter was the bottom for the year.


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William Kazer, The Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/ENPElDMImRk/

Monday, 23 September 2013

Regulation cuts spending on official meetings

China has issued a new regulation on spending for official conferences, pledging to streamline government work and curb extravagance.


The regulation, which was published on Monday and takes effect on Jan 1, applies to the central organs of all political parties, the top legislative and political advisory bodies, central government departments and publicly funded organizations overseen by the central government.


It aims to close loopholes in the current regulation, which has failed to constrain unnecessary meetings and extravagance, said a statement from the Ministry of Finance, which led the drawing-up of the regulation.


Organizations covered by the document must include spending for their conferences in their annual budgets and give details on each item in the expenditures, the regulation stipulates, adding that no cost beyond the budget will be allowed.


Spending must be settled through a bank transfer or government credit card instead of cash.


Conferences with fewer than 50 participants should use the organizer’s meeting room rather than venues in a hotel. Five-star hotels shall not be used unless the conference is hosted in the name of the Communist Party of China Central Committee or State Council, and such meetings must be approved by the two before being held.


Organizers are forbidden to charge attendees for their meetings or ask their local branches or companies to pay for conference spending. They are also banned from choosing places outside Beijing if participants are mainly based in the capital.


Dinners during a government conference shall not be served with expensive dishes or liquor. Decorations and flowers shall not be placed in meeting venues.


Sightseeing and souvenir will no longer be offered for participants, according to the regulation, which also requests that related organizations make public the name, topic, participants and costs of their conferences unless they contain confidential government information.


A tougher standard is also applied to control the number of participants, and all conferences, with the exception of those hosted in the name of the CPC Central Committee or State Council, will be limited to two days.


The only clause that may allow meeting organizers to relax a little is that spending standards for each participant will be slightly lifted, a consideration to offset the swelling cost.


“The move shows the Party and the central government are determined to further improve government work and root out officials’ extravagance rather than just making some empty promises,” said Wu Hui, an associate professor of governance at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee.


“Though the government made rules on government conference spending long ago and keeps promising to implement them strictly, some government officials always find loopholes,” he said. “This time they will find it virtually impossible to ignore or sidestep the regulation because the loopholes are closed and the guidelines are clearly detailed.”


In addition, the new version has a larger coverage compared with the existing one, and meetings convened by publicly funded organizations and small-scale workshops will also be subject to the stringent rules, he said.


By Zhao Lei ( China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/ShKoBF3d5IU/

China Criticizes Japan for Military Radar Plans

China criticized Japan on Monday for its plans to install a cutting-edge U.S. military radar system to monitor North Korean missile launches, saying that could impact regional stability and upset the strategic balance.


The X-band radar system would boost Japan’s ability to track and intercept missiles from across the Sea of Japan. That was “not conducive to regional nuclear non-proliferation and stability, and will cause an extremely negative impact on the global strategic balance,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said.


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The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/BSrEkjrixbA/

With Official’s Conviction, China Calls Attention to Its Crackdown on Corruption

HONG KONG — With one of China’s most divisive politicians, Bo Xilai, banished to life in prison on Sunday, the Communist Party stepped up its efforts to convince a scandal-weary public that the spectacle of his trial proved that national leaders were serious about rooting out official corruption.


Guards took Mr. Bo away in handcuffs after a court in eastern China declared him guilty of accepting bribes, embezzling state funds and abusing his power in a failed attempt to thwart a murder investigation involving his wife. While he can still appeal the verdict, the Communist Party controls China’s judiciary, and the chances are scant that any judge would overturn the verdict or reduce his sentence of life in prison.


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Chris Buckley, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/38qIGW_1hys/

China says willing to help in Syria chemical weapons process

(Reuters) – China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi told U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon that China is willing to send experts to help in the Syrian chemical weapons destruction process, and reiterated that a political solution is the only way to solve the crisis in Syria.


“Currently, it is important that the U.N. Security Council should maintain unity, overcome their differences and find a consensus so as to send a signal of unity to the outside,” Wang was quoted as telling Ban in a statement posted on the website of China’s foreign ministry.


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Sui-Lee Wee, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/dkTTsxzqR9U/

China manufacturing rises to 6-month high in HSBC survey, latest sign No. 2 economy rebounding

HONG KONG — China’s manufacturing rose to a six-month high in September, in the latest sign that the world’s second biggest economy is gradually recovering from a prolonged slowdown.


The preliminary version of HSBC’s purchasing managers’ index released Monday climbed to 51.2 from 50.1 in August on a 100-point scale. Numbers above 50 indicate an expansion in activity.


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The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/RxsB_fUvUf0/

Chinese Demand for Coal Is Cooling

China’s appetite for coal, once seemingly unlimited, is starting to wane, and the effects are rippling far from the Middle Kingdom.


With the world’s second-largest economy, China in recent years has been driving demand for all sorts of commodities, especially thermal coal, which is used to fuel power plants. But now economic growth in China is slowing, and rising public anger over air pollution is increasing pressure on utilities running the country’s coal-burning power plants to shift to nuclear power and natural gas.


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Rhiannon Hoyle, The Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/iEuSxpSgdpk/

PLA Air Force kicks off war games

“Mission Action 2013 C,” the third and final phase of China’s “Mission Action 2013″ military exercise, began on Sunday.


The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force has dispatched various aircraft including fighters, bombers, scouts and aerotransports for the exercise, which involves over 10,000 personnel.


During the exercise, the air force will collaborate with naval aviation forces, naval ships and land troops to conduct far-distance maneuvers, joint air defense, air confrontation and joint aid in strange terrains and war environments.


“Mission Action 2013″ is part of the annual military training plan and has been approved by the Central Military Commission.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/yOP20XS4yJc/

Friday, 20 September 2013

US sees sharp disagreement with China over Syria, urges Beijing to play ‘constructive role’

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State John Kerry acknowledged Thursday a sharp disagreement with China over how the international community should respond to the use of chemical weapons in Syria and urged Beijing to play a “positive” role in the U.N. Security Council on the issue.


China has strongly opposed strikes on Syria by the U.S. or its allies as a response to an Aug. 21 chemical attack near Damascus that the U.S. blames on government forces and says killed more than 1,400 people. In the council, where China holds veto power, it has joined with Russia in opposing action against Syria.


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The Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/LkP0z5PybGU/

PetroChina Declines as Oil Outweighs Fed: China Overnight

Chinese energy companies from Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. (YZC) to PetroChina Co. fell in New York after rallying in Hong Kong, as slumping oil prices outweighed the Federal Reserve’s decision to maintain monetary stimulus.


The Bloomberg China-US Equity Index of the most-traded Chinese stocks in the U.S. closed little changed at 104.08 yesterday after sliding as much as 0.7 percent. American depositary receipts of PetroChina dropped, widening the discount versus its Hong Kong shares to the most in four weeks. Yanzhou slumped 2.6 percent after rising 2.5 percent in Hong Kong. Web clothing retailer Vipshop Holdings Ltd. (VIPS) rose for a fourth day and E-House China Holdings Ltd. (EJ) jumped to a two-year high.


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Belinda Cao, Bloomberg via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/1TKPxMzET40/

Six Foreign Hedge Funds to Gain Foothold in China

China, which has been gradually opening up its financial system, is about to let foreign hedge funds stick a small toe in.


Regulators in the city of Shanghai have agreed to let a group of American and British hedge funds operate in China as part of a pilot program, according to people briefed on the program. The funds are expected to be able to raise $50 million each from Chinese institutions to invest around the world, these people said.


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Alexandra Stevenson, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ChinaUsFocus/~3/RCM0VIipt6Q/