China may ease investment rules in free trade zones
BEIJING - China may ease investment rules in three planned free trade zones (FTZs) in south China's Guangdong Province, Easat China's Fujian Province and north China's Tianjin Municipality as well as the existing Shanghai FTZ, pending approval by the legislature.
The National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee will debate the State Council's proposal to temporarily adjust regulations on administrative approvals in the FTZs.
The State Council plans to remove an administrative approval for foreign companies that want to set up ventures in these FTZs, said Gao Hucheng, minister of commerce, when explaining the bill to lawmakers.
Instead, these companies will only need to report their business plans to authorities, Gao said.
Since these preferential policies conflict with the current laws on foreign companies, Sino-foreign joint ventures and Taiwan investors, the State Council will ask for the legislature's authorization to adjust regulations in the FTZs, he said.
Why Xiamen
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Xiamen is one of the most economically competitive cities in China and was one of the first Special Economic Zones on the Chinese mainland. As a vice-provincial city independently listed on the State development plan, it has provincial-level authority in economic administration and local legislative power. In 2010, the Xiamen SEZ was expanded to cover the entire municipality. Today, Xiamen is a modern and international port city.