Attention during China's annual lianghui (conferences of the advisory Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference followed by the largely rubber stamp legislative National People's Congress) focused on adoption of the constitutional amendment to eliminate term limits on the offices of President and Vice President, allowing President Xi Jinping to remain in office indefinitely.

Of critical importance also, however, was adoption of a host of major government reorganizations. Ministry-level organizations and different functions were merged into a smaller number of departments and the number of officials with ministerial rank will be reduced. After the reorganization, the number of ministerial-level organizations under the State Council will be reduced by eight, the number of vice ministerial-level organizations will be reduced by seven, and the State Council will consist altogether of 26 ministries and commissions (excluding the General Office of the State Council).

The changes are especially intended to increase efficiency and to improve regulation in critical sectors like environmental protection and financial services.

Much will depend on how smoothly the reorganizations proceed. In some instances, particularly the National Markets Supervision Administration, there is a risk that the combination of so many functions will actually hamper policy formation and implementation. Moreover, in some sectors like competition law where different agencies are merged, much will depend upon which of the old agencies dominates the new agency and its culture.

The changes are as follows:

  1. Establishment of a Ministry of Natural Resources combining the functions of the Ministry of Land and Resources, State Oceanographic Administration and China State Bureau of Geology, Survey and Mapping;
  2. Rebranding and expanding the mission of the Ministry of Environmental Protection into the Ministry of Ecological Environment, and this new ministry will also assume certain responsibilities previously assigned to the National Development and Reform Commission, Ministry of Land and Resources and Ministry of Water Resources;1
  3. Renaming and expanding the mission of the Ministry of Agriculture into the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, reflecting the need for a broader approach to rural development to provide comprehensive solutions to the problems of the sannong (agriculture, farmers and rural areas);
  4. Merger of the Ministry of Culture and Chinese National Tourism Administration into the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, reflecting China's effort to grow its soft power;
  5. Merger of the National Health and Family Planning Commission and State Council Leading Small Group's Office on Deepening Reform of the Medical and Health System into the National Health Commission, reflecting the deemphasis on family planning and advancement of medical and health system reform;
  6. Establishment of a Ministry of Veterans Affairs, reflecting long-delayed recognition of the need to reverse years of neglect for military veterans which has been a potential source of instability, while also making enlistment in the military more attractive, especially among educated and qualified recruits, to raise the military's warfighting capability;
  7. Establishment of a Ministry of Emergency Management, abolishing the State Administration of Workplace Safety and elevating responses to emergencies of different kinds to ministerial status;
  8. Reorganization of the Ministry of Science and Technology, reflecting the government's focus on innovation as the key to prosperity and national security;
  9. Reorganization and expansion of the Ministry of Justice by incorporating the State Council Legislative Affairs Office, thereby reducing the oversight and review role of the State Council over constituent ministries and likely reflecting the reduced stature of the office of Premier;
  10. Making the Ministry of Water Resources more efficient by eliminating the State Council's autonomous Three Gorges Project Construction Committee and South-North Water Diversion Project Construction Committee and their respective offices;
  11. Making the National Audit Office more efficient by eliminating the Board of Supervisors for Key Large-Sized State-owned Enterprises; and
  12. Merging the Ministry of Supervision and the Party's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection into a new National Supervisory Commission with constitutional status, bringing the Party's internal investigative methods into government service and reflecting the influence of Wang Qishan, newly retired from the Party Politburo but expected to be elected Vice President by the NPC.

In addition to these ministerial-level measures, the following additional reorganizations were instituted at the bureau-level:

  1. Establishment of a National Markets Supervision Administration, merging the State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC), General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), and China Food and Drug Administration. The National Markets Supervision Administration will be (among other things) a new, unified competition law enforcement agency, taking over the former anti-monopoly regulatory functions of SAIC, the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM), and the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). These changes are intended to make market and industry regulation more efficient;
  2. Establishment of an International Development Cooperation Agency to coordinate China's foreign aid polices, including focusing on supporting the Belt and Road Initiative, by unifying functions previously housed in MOFCOM and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
  3. Resimplifying the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television as the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television;
  4. Merging the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) and China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) into the new China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) which, together with the transfer of their major legislative and regulatory drafting functions to the People's Bank of China (PBOC), furthers the centralization of financial regulation (which is expected to be led by Politburo Standing Committee member Liu He), but does not go so far as to abolish the China Securities Regulatory Commission or actually bring the functions of the commissions into the PBOC;
  5. Reorganizing NDRC, in part by transferring some of its regulatory functions to the new National Markets Supervision Administration referenced above;
  6. Reorganization of the State Medical Security Administration;
  7. Merging the State Grain Administration into an enlarged State Grain and Materials Reserves Administration;
  8. Reorganization of the State Immigration Administration;
  9. Merging the State Forestry Administration into an enlarged State Forestry and Grasslands Administration;
  10. Expanding the State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) by incorporating the trademark responsibilities of SAIC and the geographic indicators responsibilities of AQSIQ with SIPO's patent responsibilities to form the new SIPO which will be managed under the new National Markets Supervision Administration, although responsibility for copyrights will apparently remain with the National Copyright Administration of China;
  11. Elevating the role of the National Council for Social Security Fund; and
  12. Reforming the state and local taxation structures by merging them at the provincial and local levels to eliminate duplication.

Footnote

1. (1) and (2) reflect China's increased focused on environmental protection which is now embedded in the Constitution as a responsibility of the state

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