Administrative reforms should be further promoted to transform government functions and boost market vitality, Premier Li Keqiang told governments at the county level and above on June 28.
Such reforms will play a supporting role in increasing economic growth and employment opportunities, Premier Li said at a national teleconference focused on administrative streamlining.
Within five years, a unified negative list for market access will be implemented nationwide, the Premier said. It is also expected to cut the time for construction project approvals and customs clearances by half, he said, and the time to open an enterprise will be shortened to five days.
A negative list is a list of areas where investment is prohibited; all other areas are presumed to be open. A negative list for market access has been introduced by China’s 11 pilot free-trade zones in areas such as Shanghai, Tianjin and Guangdong province.
Currently it takes 22.9 days to open an enterprise on average in China, much longer than the 8.5 days for members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, according to the State Administration for Market Regulation. The 8.5 days will be China’s target for the first half of the next year, Ma Zhengqi, deputy head of the administration, said last month.
Premier Li called for building an integrated national platform for governmental services. He also called for sharing data between departments under the State Council, China’s Cabinet, within three years to facilitate local governments’ services. Within five years, all requests for government services should be completed on one website, he said.
Over the past five years, governments at all levels have made administrative streamlining a priority, effectively pushing forward entrepreneurship and innovation, employment and improvement of the business environment, Premier Li said.