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Cabinet acts to reduce red tape

By CHEN XIN, LAN LAN and WU WENCONG | China Daily | Updated: 2013-05-17 03:12

Changes open door for international education cooperation

The president or principal administrator appointed by Chinese-foreign cooperatively run schools will no longer require central government approval, according to a list of the canceled administrative approval items released by the State Council.

The cancellation also includes cooperatively run educational institutions from the mainland and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, the Macao Special Administrative Region and Taiwan, it said.

Before the cancellation, the president or principal administrator appointed by those schools needed to be approved by the Ministry of Education, according to the list.

Wang Huiyao, director-general of the Center for China and Globalization in Beijing, said the move is a good start for the country to further open its door to more international cooperation in the educational sector.

According to the list, the Ministry of Culture will delegate the rights of examination and approval of commercial performances at non-singing and dancing entertainment venues by foreign art performance groups and individuals in China to provincial cultural departments.

"After simplifying the approval procedures for running cooperatively run schools, the country will surely see a growing number of such schools in the future, which provides more choices for domestic students," he said.

Meanwhile, domestic schools will face increasing competition when more advanced overseas educational institutions enter the country, he said.

"We received the notice from the State Council on Wednesday, and we will make concrete implementation plans and fulfill them as soon as possible," said Zhang Weiguan, a staff member with the department that oversees entertainment performances under the Ministry of Culture.

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