Committed to Deeper Reform,Opening-up
2018-07-12ByLAIXIANJIN
By LAI XIANJIN
TO mark the 40th anniversary of reform and opening-up this year, China has decided to further ease its economic policies, and implement a sweeping reform program for Party and government institutions.
The newly unveiled reform package– the eighth round of restructuring of Party and government institutions in 40 years – will be of far-reaching significance to realize the “Two Centenary Goals” of achieving a moderately prosperous society by 2020, a year before the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China, and building a prosperous, modern socialist country by 2050, just a year after the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Peoples Republic of China.
The reform package will provide a strong and forcible organizational guarantee for China to modernize governance, which in turn will help achieve the “Two Centenary Goals.”
A country needs well-functioning institutions to provide good governance. But well-functioning institutions are neither born nor can they be developed overnight. This means Party and government institutions have to undergo necessary adjustments and reforms as Chinas economy and society move forward and its peoples living conditions improve.
The latest round of reforms involve more than 80 central government and state organs, as well as institutions directly affiliated to them, which will deal the heaviest blow to vested interests in four decades.
So, given the complicated situation, all involved institutions should strengthen their political integrity and follow the policies of the core leadership. They should learn to distinguish the “gains”from the “losses” both at the departmental and the individual levels, and take concrete actions to maintain the supreme authority of the CPC Central Committee.
The experience of the past four decades show the key to institutional reform is to promote optimization, coordinated development and high efficiency of their functions, and to avoid “integration in appearance but separation in essence.”
Under the overall reform framework mapped out by the top authorities, the institutions with the same or similar functions should be restructured, and“powers and responsibilities” should be demarcated so that the functions of different institutions are correctly defined. And after their merger, unified administration of affairs should be carried out to create the necessary time and conditions to help integrate their functions.
This will be particularly important during the early days of the new round of institutional reform, because it will create a favorable environment and better conditions for middle- and late-stage merger or reorganization of different institutions. While evaluating, analyzing and overhauling the intersecting and overlapping functions of different institutions, a strict performance management and administrative accountability system should be adopted, along with the efforts to promote internal information communication and sharing as a way of breaking the “island of information.”
And in the process of merger and reorganization of institutions, practical measures should be taken to reshape organizational culture, including taking measures to play down the culture of former institutions and build a culture of deeper integration for new institutions.