The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress is
currently discussing the draft anti-monopoly law. In the view of
this author, this is a landmark event in the country's economic
life, although some people think otherwise.
Some simply dismiss the draft law as beyond the ken of ordinary
Chinese people, who are preoccupied with issues such as employment
and incomes. Others regard it as merely a "luxury," arguing that,
as China's market economy remains in its infancy, it will backfire
if handled improperly. Others believe the law will deal a telling
blow to large state-owned enterprises that dominate their
respective sectors, and, therefore, pave the way for large-scale
privatization.
These voices represent different interest groups and reflect how
divided public opinion is on such economic issues.
The draft law, regarded by many as an "economic constitution,"
is important because its influence would not only greatly assist
the building of a market economic infrastructure, it would also
help chart the future direction of China's economic reforms. And it
is pretty safe to say that the draft anti-monopoly law is a vitally
important measure to assure the Chinese economy's sustainable
development.
The law directly concerns the people's livelihoods. It is not,
as some would argue, an abstract concept.
To begin with, the law would help create an economic climate
favoring fair competition, one which would offer small and
medium-sized enterprises space in which to survive and expand. Once
these enterprises, of which there are millions, feel secure and
start to invest massively in technological upgrading and expansion,
they will be able to hire large numbers of workers. This, in turn,
would help largely ease employment pressures, a chronic problem for
decision makers.
From a different perspective, the monopoly on resources,
technology and information is currently translating into a price
monopoly. Such a monopoly is nothing but the most direct
encroachment upon public interests.
Examples abound telecommunication firms imposing two-way charges
on mobile phone users in defiance of customers' complaints; banks
levying consultation fees on clients requesting information; real
estate developers turning a deaf ear to protests over soaring
property prices, and coal, oil and electricity firms taking no heed
of the state's macro-economic regulation.
All this threatens to deteriorate the living standards of people
in the middle and low-income brackets, while also widening the
already serious wealth gap.
In the absence of certain price controls in the general context
that competition is protected, people's livelihoods are hardly
guaranteed. In contrast, monopolies are able to continuously
improve the incomes and welfare of their staff, enjoying very low
competition costs.
Media reports reveal that the annual income of middle-level
managerial personnel in a petroleum company, for example, stands
between 250,000-350,000 yuan (US$31,250-US$43,750), enormously high
by the Chinese standard. The annual salary of the governor of a
state-owned commercial bank was 1.3 million yuan (US$162,500) last
year and could hit 2 million (US$250,000) this year, in sharp
contrast to the barely more than 1,000 yuan (US$125) monthly income
of the average laborer in Chinese cities.
This kind of high pay, however, does no good to these monopolies
in the long run. Reaping fat profits without being competitive only
serves to wear down the vitality and creativity of these monopolies
players, setting up hidden traps for their future development.
For those who worry that the anti-monopoly law would pave the
way for privatization, the following facts may serve as a sobering
agent.
About 140 billion yuan (US$17.5 billion) worth of costs was
saved in the nation's power-generating sector last year. But at the
same time, an additional burden of 160 billion yuan (US$20 billion)
was imposed on electricity consumers as a result of power price
hikes.
Large state-owned petrol firms keep raising their prices, using
international oil price hikes as an excuse. But they never include
the low costs of oil extraction on Chinese oilfields into their
cost calculation.
Should all these indecent deeds be justified simply because
these enterprises are "state-owned?"
When state monopolies turn the power of public wealth
distribution into their own exclusive right to do what they like
with this money, they cannot be said to be "state-owned" at all.
Instead, they are actually "privately owned" by these specific
groups of people. Some media comments say that the public no longer
stand this type of behavior by these monopolies. This could not be
closer to the truth.
Such monopolies are actually examples of non-market economic
behavior buttressed by government power. We may as well call them
"administrative monopolies."
Monopolies arising from government involvement in the economic
life are a necessary economic phenomenon in the course of the
nation's shift from a planned to a market economy. This kind of
monopoly played a positive role in promoting the reform of the old
economic set-up, which started in the late 1970s.
But these "administrative monopolies" have now started to hamper
the progress of the market economy and the standardization of
market behavior, as so many profound changes have already taken
place in the economy. In view of all of this, the anti-monopoly law
will help untangle government power and market rights, and is also
an effort at clearly defining the boundaries of government
power.
The process in which the anti-monopoly law is conceived,
drafted, revised, enacted and implemented is also an opportunity
for central and local governments to re-examine their relationships
with economic activities, understand more profoundly the
relationship between public power and public demand and also
effectively bring an end to the government overstepping its limits
in social and economic affairs.
The author is a researcher with the China Foundation for
International and Strategic Studies.
(China Daily July 13, 2006)