Home>News Center>China
       
 

88 laws, regulations take effect on first day
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-01-02 09:27

Eighty-eight new laws and regulations take effect on the first day of the New Year that cover a wide range of areas including foreign trade, taxation, advertising standards and supervision of the military, Xinhua News Agency reports.

As part of China's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), seven laws and regulations took effect on January 1 that lift some restrictions on auto imports and foreign participation in gasoline sales, auctions and insurance, Xinhua said.

The new laws will formally cancel China's auto import quota and allow private and foreign companies to set up petrol stations in China in accordance with China's WTO accession commitments, it said.

A government decree on the import and export of goods also goes into effect Saturday that will bring China's definition of countries or regions of origin of goods in line with WTO standards.

The new regulation is aimed at curbing the counterfeiting of certificates of origin for export products that have been widely used to circumvent quota tariffs and taxes, especially in the processing and garment trades.

Starting from January 1, China will also audit military officers with the rank of lieutenant colonel or higher who are in charge of army finance work, according to a regulation issued by the military, Xinhua said.

Migrant construction workers also obtained the right to directly prosecute construction companiess for back wages, according to another judicial interpretation which came into force.

A new regulation imposes stricter management on advertisers and advertising content in an effort to regulate a growing and often chaotic advertising market, it added.

From January 1, all crimes involving bank cards will be treated as "credit card" crimes in the criminal code, according to a draft judicial explanation passed on Wednesday by China's top legislature.

In another regulation, tax authorities will publicize a list of tax evaders via newspapers, TV and Internet from January 1.

Meanwhile, according to a new regulation issued by the central bank, the maximum currency which can be taken outside China per person will increase from 6,000 yuan to 20,000 yuan (723 to 2,409 US dollars) from January 1, it said.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Chinese death, missing toll rises in quake aftermath

 

   
 

Macao doctors join team to provide aid

 

   
 

Wen visits miners, vows to curb big accidents

 

   
 

Expats worry for families, homelands

 

   
 

Ku remembered as 'great man'

 

   
 

Hopes rise for Taiwan flights

 

   
  Chill takes its toll on elderly and children
   
  SEF chairman Ku Chen-fu passes away
   
  Nine Chinese perish in tsunami
   
  Premier Wen to join tsunami summit
   
  Forty percent of workers work as freelancers
   
  Beijing plans charter flights across Straits
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement