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China sets record for govt procurement
BEIJING—China purchased at
least 400 billion yuan ($55.6 billion) of goods and services in 2007, a
new high compared to the 368.1 billion yuan recorded a year earlier,
preliminary figures from the Ministry of Finance (MOF) revealed.
Assistant Financial Minister Zhang Tong described the expansion as
"outstanding" given the procurement stood at only 100 billion yuan in
2002, the first year the mechanism was introduced. The past five years
have also witnessed an increasingly diversified government consumption
that expanded from solely commodities in the beginning to services and
engineering, he said.
With 13,000 people engaged in purchasing nationwide, China has twice
revised its procurement list to include 18 categories encompassing
nearly 4,770 items. Energy-saving products accounted for a large
percentage of the newly-added items. To lead by example, the government
has pledged to reduce energy consumption for every 10,000 yuan of gross
domestic product by 20 percent and pollutant emissions by 10 percent for
the 2006-2010 period.
This year, student textbooks for primary and junior high schools,
medicine, farm machinery and other items to distribute to the needy free
of charge or at inexpensive prices will be added to the list, Financial
Minister Xie Xuren told a recent work meeting for 2008. Under a MOF
directive promulgated last month, government procurement will favor
independent innovation products starting this year, a practice, experts
said, the United States adopted in the late 1950s to foster domestic
high-tech industries, including aeronautic and astronautic technology,
computing, semiconductors and integrated circuits.
Qinghua University law professor Yu An said the move would provide good
incentives for domestic firms to speed up technical innovation.
—Xinhua |