China News Service, February 1. According to the Chinese Government website, in order to implement the major decisions and arrangements of the Party Central Committee and the State Council on promoting high-quality development and building a market-oriented, legal and international first-class business environment, we will further promote the national unified general In order to build the market, promote the healthy development of the private economy, and urge the resolution of outstanding issues affecting the construction of the business environment, the State Council's "Internet + Inspection" platform will collect clues and opinions from the society in five aspects from now on:

  One is the clues to problems that hinder market entry and exit.

  1. Restrict the entry of foreign business entities. Relevant localities and units set unreasonable conditions in the form of filing, registration, annual inspection, certification or establishment of branches to raise the entry threshold for foreign business entities.

  2. Set up unreasonable business barriers. Relevant localities and units exclude and restrict business entities from participating in bidding, government procurement and other activities based on registration place, ownership, organizational form and other conditions.

  3. Limit market exit. Relevant localities and units have set up obstacles for enterprises to operate or relocate across regions by including them in the directory of operating abnormalities, suspending the application process, deliberately delaying, etc.; in order to one-sidedly pursue the growth of the number of operating entities in the region or fail to conscientiously implement the "one-stop service" system for enterprise cancellation , making it difficult to cancel the company.

  The second is clues to problems that hinder fair market competition.

  1. Abuse of administrative power to eliminate or restrict competition. Relevant localities and units use administrative orders, administrative authorization, administrative guidance, etc. or through industry associations and chambers of commerce to force, organize, and guide operators to enter into monopoly agreements, abuse market dominance, or implement other behaviors that eliminate or restrict competition.

  2. Implement local protection. Relevant localities and units adopt discriminatory measures against foreign and imported goods and services, implement various preferential policies under local protection, and implement discriminatory treatment against foreign operators’ local investments or branches established.

  3. Taking advantage of advantageous position to engage in unfair competition. Relevant state-owned enterprises and large enterprises have abused their dominant market position and hindered private enterprises, small and medium-sized enterprises and other business entities from participating fairly in market competition.

  4. Restrict operations and designated transactions. Relevant localities and units have illegally set up franchise rights or granted franchise rights to operators without fair competition, restricting the operation, purchase, and use of goods and services provided by specific operators.

  The third is clues to problems affecting government services and administrative efficiency.

  1. Government services are not convenient. Relevant local and unit government service venues are not centralized, window settings are unreasonable, there are a large number of government mobile applications, repeated registrations, etc., and online appointments or online submission of materials are mandatory; the government service hotline is not efficient, and the complaint and suggestion mechanism is not efficient. Improvement and failure to conscientiously implement the key issues and requirements of “getting one thing done efficiently”.

  2. Government services are not standardized. Relevant localities and units have added additional processing steps and application materials in the approval process, and systems such as first-person responsibility, one-time notification, and time-limited processing are not fully implemented.

  3. Government data is not shared. Relevant local and unit systems are not connected, and data is difficult to share. The application of electronic license data sharing is not in place. Data sharing verification items still require physical licenses or paper materials. Credit information is not connected between different credit management platforms, and credit repair progress is inconsistent.

  4. Law enforcement inspections are not standardized. Relevant local and unit law enforcement inspections lack reasonable overall arrangements, are excessive and frequent, are simple and crude, are too light and too serious, and affect the normal production and operation of enterprises; relevant staff take the opportunity to take advantage of others and seek personal gain.

  5. Government-enterprise communication is not in place. Relevant local and unit policies did not fully listen to and absorb the opinions of enterprises before they were promulgated. After their promulgation, there was insufficient publicity, interpretation and public opinion guidance. Policy adjustments and implementation were "one size fits all" and "sharp turns". The government and enterprises lacked a normalized communication mechanism to build a close and clear-cut government. Political and business relations are not in place.

  The fourth is the clues to the problem of infringement of the legitimate rights and interests of business entities.

  1. Government promises are not fulfilled. Relevant localities and units engage in involutionary investment promotion, granting preferential policies regardless of the actual situation, but use various excuses to delay the implementation; and default on corporate accounts without disagreement.

  2. Interfering with business operations in violation of regulations. Relevant localities and units intervened in economic disputes in violation of regulations, seized, seized and frozen property beyond authority, scope, amount, and time limit, arbitrarily restricting the freedom of private entrepreneurs, and affecting the legitimate production and operation of private enterprises.

  3. Industry associations and chambers of commerce charge arbitrary fees. Relevant associations and chambers of commerce force membership and charge fees, or rely on administrative influence to charge fees, or through evaluations and commendations for meeting standards, professional qualifications and illegal fees, etc.

  4. Intermediary service agencies charge arbitrary fees. Intermediary agencies engaged in inspection, testing, evaluation, certification, appraisal, notarization and other businesses, monopolistic operations, compulsory services, unreasonable charges, etc.

  5. Intellectual property protection is not in place. Relevant localities and units have not implemented the punitive compensation system for intellectual property infringement, the rapid processing mechanism for intellectual property infringement and administrative non-litigation enforcement, and the review of trademark applications by business entities has been slow.

  The fifth is the clues to the problems affecting the expansion of opening up.

  1. Customs clearance service is inconvenient. Relevant localities and units have insufficient cooperation and low work efficiency in port inspection, supervision and law enforcement, etc., resulting in low customs clearance efficiency at border ports and affecting the import and export trade of enterprises.

  2. Implement discriminatory measures against foreign-invested enterprises. Relevant localities and units exclude or discriminate against foreign-invested enterprises and their products and services by restricting brands or using foreign brands, and enjoy policies for foreign-invested enterprises and their products and services, except where laws and regulations clearly stipulate or involve national security areas. Set additional conditions, etc.

  At the same time, opinions and suggestions on the government's construction of a market-oriented, legal and international first-class business environment are solicited.

  The Inspection Office of the General Office of the State Council will summarize and organize the clues and opinions and suggestions received, and urge relevant localities and departments to study and deal with them in a timely manner. The Inspection Office of the General Office of the State Council will directly send personnel to conduct inspections on clues to important issues that have strong reactions from business entities and the public and are universal and typical. If it is verified to be true, it will be dealt with seriously in accordance with the law and regulations.