Breaking administrative monopoly benefits all
2002-12-24 China Daily
The recent pledge by the State Administration for Industry and Commerce to
break more administrative monopolies next year represents China's resolve to
honor its World Trade Organization commitments, said an editorial in Beijing
Youth Daily. Excerpts follow:
Administrative monopoly, mainly in the forms of industrial and regional
monopoly, has resulted in heavy economic losses even more than those resulting
from official's bribery or embezzlement.
According to statistics, monopoly industries grabbed 53 billion yuan (US$6.4
billion) in excessive fees from consumers from 1998 to 2001. Banking on
government power, administrative monopoly usually erects stern market entry
standards and controls the supply of products or services, thus forcing
consumers to pay more for these products or services.
Therefore, once the monopoly is broken, investment is expected to flood into
these industries to increase supply, and suppressed demand in these
monopoly-plagued sectors will also soar to propel the overall economic
advancement.
But the anti-monopoly campaign is bound to be an uphill battle. Governments
play a leading role in the campaign, but some local governments are usually the
main vested interests group behind the administrative monopoly. Public scrutiny
by consumers, enterprises and media alike in the drive is therefore urgent and
necessary.
The law will put the country's anti-monopoly offensive on a legal and
systematic footing. In addition, the pending law will also be able to prevent
multinational giants from using their market advantages to manipulate the price
and quantity of their products in the domestic
market.
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