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BEIJING, May 15 -- China is planning to raise the proportion of profits it collects from major State-owned enterprises (SOEs) in a move to balance income distribution, but analysts said the move should be bolder and the collected profits used to improve public well-being.The Ministry of Finance said on Tuesday that it might raise the ratio of profits of SOEs to be submitted to the State coffers.According to existing rules, monopoly enterprises under the administration of the central government in sectors like tobacco, oil, petrochemicals, power, telecommunications and coal mining should submit 10 percent of their post-tax profits, while the ratio for those in the iron and steel, transportation, electronics and trade sectors should be 5 percent.Financial corporations and companies in sectors like railways, transportation, education, culture, science and technology and agriculture are not included in the profit submission framework.The Ministry of Finance did not reveal by how much the ratio would be raised."It should be raised properly, and even if it were raised by 10 percentage points, it doesn't matter too much for those central enterprises, given their high profit level," said Zhang Wenkui, researcher with the State Council's Development Research Center.Central enterprises have been criticized by the public for having taken advantage of their monopoly or market predominance to make excessive profits. Some of them have further fueled public anger as they bid to purchase land at high prices, which is believed to have pushed up home prices.The central government collected profits of 14 billion yuan ( billion), 44.4 billion yuan and 98.9 billion yuan respectively in 2007, 2008 and last year from SOEs. In 2009 alone, however, the enterprises made profits totaling 965.6 billion yuan.
BEIJING, April 22 (Xinhua) -- China's top food safety authority issued new regulations Thursday, setting more stringent requirements on the use and the approval of food additives.The Ministry of Health's "Regulations of New Food Additives," published on its website, set six new restrictions on the use of food additives.The new regulations forbid the use of food additives to mislead consumers about the content and quality of food or to fake food content.Using food additives to disguise decaying and bad quality food is also forbidden.Under the new regulations, food producers are required to use the minimum amount of necessary food additives, and are not allowed to use those that would reduce the nutritional value of food.The ministry would approve new food additives, only if they are proved to be necessary in food production and safe for humans in tests organized by the ministry, the new regulations stipulate.The ministry must conduct reassessments of the safety of its approved food additives, when their necessity and safety are questioned by new research results.The new regulations takes effective Thursday.Food quality in China has been a major concern after a series of scandals.In 2004, at least 13 babies died from malnutrition in the east China's Anhui Province and another 171 were hospitalized, after consuming infant milk powder that contained too little protein.In November 2006, the country's food safety authorities found seven companies producing salted red-yolk eggs with cancer-causing red Sudan dyes to make their eggs look redder and fresher.And in 2008, six babies died and 300,000 others fell ill after being fed with baby formula made from milk contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine.
SHENZHEN, May 22 (Xinhua) -- Preliminary investigation shows that factors including failed romance, unrestrained gambling could be the reasons behind suicide of a Foxconn Technology Group employee Friday, said police authorities in south China's Shenzhen City.Nan Gang, 21, climbed to the top of a factory building in Foxconn's industrial complex in Longhua Township and fell to his death at 4:37 a.m., said Huang Jianwei, a spokesman of the Bao'an Police Station, of the Shenzhen Public Security Bureau.Nan's suspected suicide was the 10th of the kind ever happening at the Foxconn's Shenzhen plant since the beginning of the year.Police said they learned from investigations that Nan Gang's parents were divorced and Nan was the only child of the family. Nan's ex-girlfriend got married this year in February, and his new girlfriend also deserted him early this month.Nan was said to be ill tempered and fond of gambling, and was thus in deep debts before his death.According to the police, not long ago, Nan had fights with his co-workers, so he employed others to beat the co-workers, but was later blackmailed by the same group of people.Nan allegedly had said he would take revenge and even showed his intent to commit suicide before he fell off the building Friday.Police have already captured the suspects for blackmailing Nan pending further investigation.Shenzhen-based Foxconn's company profile on its website says it's the world's top electronics manufacturer with more than 600,000 employees and ranked 109 among the Fortune 500 companies in 2009. It is linked to Taiwan electronics giant Hon Hai Group.
BEIJING, April 12 (Xinhua) -- In a bid to further regulate the selection and promotion of government and Party cadres, the Communist Party of China (CPC) turned to the public for help in its four newly released documents."One breakthrough of these rules is we shift the focus from simply supervising the procedures of cadre selection and promotion to also weighing in what the colleagues and the locals think about," said a statement released Monday by the Organization Department of the CPC Central Committee.The four documents, promulgated on March 31 by the General Office of the CPC Central Committee, cover the selection and auditing of officials and set out penalties for those found guilty of misconduct in the selection and promotion of government and Party cadres.According to the new rules, personnel departments should consult staff within the organization on every newly appointed officials. The results, paired with local Party committees' official report on personnel changes, will be submitted annually to superior Party committees' for review.These opinions will also be incorporated into the work evaluation of officials in charge of local cadre selection and promotion.In serious cases, leading officials in the Party committees who misuse their power and violate CPC regulations on the selection and appointment of Party and government cadres could be dismissed from their posts, demoted, transferred to other posts, or asked to resign.To better solicit public opinions, Party committees at provincial levels across the country are moving to open online service and telephone hotline for whistleblowers to report such violations.According to the rules, personnel departments must carry out investigation based on detailed reports from the public and the media.
BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhua) -- China's Vice Premier Li Keqiang Friday called for the development of a recycling economy to improve resource utilization efficiency and protect the environment.Developing a recycling economy was a significant mission for China, which urgently needed to change its economic growth mode of "high consumption, high pollution and poor recycling," said Li in an inspection tour to a state recycling economy pilot base under ChinaChem Group.Li said developing a recycling economy would help the enterprises improve product structures, fuel technology innovation and improve competitiveness. China's Vice Premier Li Keqiang (C) speaks during a meeting as he makes an inspection tour to a state recycling economy pilot base under ChinaChem Group in Beijing, China, May 14, 2010. Li Friday called for the development of a recycling economy to improve resource utilization efficiency and protect the environment.He called for a combination of resource conservation, environment protection and economic efficiency to cultivate emerging "green" industries.Authorities should transform traditional industries by promoting a clean, efficient and safe production, said Li.Li also called for more investment in recycling economy development, and implementation of supporting government fiscal, pricing and financial policies.