Ministry of Commerce (China)

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Ministry of Commerce of the People's Republic of China
中华人民共和国商务部
Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó Shāngwùbù
MINISTRY OF COMMERCE,P.R.CHINA badge.svg
Logo of the Ministry of Commerce
Ministry of Commerce of China (20210527180200).jpg
Headquarters
Agency overview
FormedMarch 2003;21 years ago (2003-03)
Preceding agency
  • Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Co-operation
Type Constituent Department of the State Council (cabinet-level)
Jurisdiction Government of China
Headquarters Beijing
Minister responsible
Deputy Ministers responsible
Agency executives
  • Tu Gengxin, Leader of Discipline Inspection & Supervision Team
  • Wang Wen, International Trade Negotiator
Parent agency State Council
Website www.mofcom.gov.cn OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Ministry of Commerce
Simplified Chinese 中华人民共和国商务部
Traditional Chinese 中華人民共和國商務部

The Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) is a executive department of the State Council of the People's Republic of China that is responsible for formulating policy on foreign trade, export and import regulations, foreign direct investments, consumer protection, market competition (competition regulator) and negotiating bilateral and multilateral trade agreements. it is the 20th-ranking department of the State Council. The current minister is Wang Wentao.

Contents

History

Before October 1949, the Ministry of Economic Affairs was the governing agency of the Republic of China on the mainland responsible for economic trade issues. The agency was created in 1931 and reorganized in 1937.[ citation needed ]

In November 1949, a month after the People's Republic of China was established, the Chinese Communist Party formed the Ministry of Trade (贸易部) while the MOEA continued to operate in Taiwan and several other islands.[ citation needed ]

In August 1952, the Ministry was renamed to Ministry of Foreign Trade (对外贸易部). Ye Jizhuang was the first Minister and died in the post in 1967.[ citation needed ]

In March 1982, the Ministry of Foreign Trade was merged with the Ministry of Foreign Economic Liaison (对外经济联络部), the State Import and Export Regulation Commission (国家进出口管理委员会), and the State Foreign Investment Regulation Commission (国家外国投资管理委员会), and became the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade (对外经济贸易部).[ citation needed ]

In March 1993, the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade was renamed to the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation (对外贸易经济合作部). [1] [ non-primary source needed ]

In the spring of 2003, the former Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation went through a reorganization and was renamed Ministry of Commerce. During 2003, the Ministry established Forum Macao in the Macao Special Administrative Region as a multi-lateral mechanism for cooperation between China and the Portuguese-speaking countries. [2] :62

In 2006, the Ministry of Commerce oversaw the program of "ten thousand businesses advance westward" in conjunction with the Hu-Wen administration's early emphasis on balancing regional development. [3] :217

The ministry also incorporates the former State Economic and Trade Commission and the State Development Planning Commission.

Ministry of Trade
(1949)
Ministry of Foreign TradeMinistry of Foreign Economic LiaisonState Import and Export Regulation CommissionState Foreign Investment Regulation Commission
Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation
(1993)
State Economic and Trade CommissionState Development Planning Commission
(1998)
Ministry of Commerce
(2003)

In 2018, the ministry lost its powers and responsibilities regarding anti-monopoly, intellectual property, counterfeit goods, foreign aid, and some financial products to other departments. [4] Coordinating foreign aid became the responsibility of the newly-created China International Development Cooperation Agency (CIDCA). [5] :18 MOFCOM had tended to emphasize the use of aid to support foreign trade objectives, whereas CIDCA has increasingly emphasized the use of aid to support foreign policy objectives. [5] :18

Functions

MOFCOM is in charge of the administration of foreign trade and is China's primary foreign trade negotiator. [6] :210 MOFCOM also deals with foreign investment regulation. [7] :106 MOFCOM is China's most important negotiator in the global governance of intellectual property. [6] :210–211 It additionally is responsible for developing strategic national plans in the areas of finance and taxation, drafts the central financing budget, supervises central financial expenditures, and audits the budget and accounts of state capital and the national social insurance fund. [7] :40 It works with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) to draft negative lists for foreign investments at the national level and for special economic zones. [4] MOFCOM assists in drafting laws and regulations in its relevant policy areas. [7] :40

MOFCOM additionally has responsibilities on economic relations with Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan. [4] To that end the Vice Minister An Min, and the previous Financial Secretary of Hong Kong, Antony Leung, concluded the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA). New agreements are continually negotiated between An and the current Financial Secretary John Tsang under the auspices of the CEPA. Similar agreements were also concluded between the MOFCOM and Secretariat for Economy and Finance of Macau.[ citation needed ]

In the first decade after the institution of China's Anti-Monopoly Law (2008-2018), MOFCOM was responsible for regulation of mergers under the law. [7] :89,110 Other antitrust investigations were handled by the State Administration of Industry and Commerce and the NDRC. [7] :110 During that period, MOFCOM prohibited two mergers and imposed remedies in 36 transactions, all of which involved foreign multinational corporations. [7] :110 The State Administration for Market Regulation was created and became China's primary antitrust regulator in 2018. [7] :29

List of ministers

NameTook officeLeft office
Minister of Trade
Ye Jizhuang October 1949August 1952
Minister of Foreign Trade
Ye Jizhuang [8] August 1952June 1967
Lin Haiyun [8] June 1967July 1970
Bai Xiangguo [8] July 1970October 1973
Li Qiang [8] October 1973September 1981
Zheng Tuobin September 1981March 1982
Minister of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade
Chen Muhua March 1982March 1985
Zheng Tuobin March 1985December 1990
Li Lanqing December 1990March 1993
Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Co-operation
Wu Yi March 1993March 1998
Shi Guangsheng March 1998March 2003
Minister of Commerce
Lü Fuyuan March 2003February 2004
Bo Xilai February 2004December 2007
Chen Deming December 2007March 2013
Gao Hucheng March 2013February 2017
Zhong Shan February 2017December 2020
Wang Wentao December 2020Incumbent

Structure

A ministerial-level MOFCOM vice minister serves as the International Trade Representative, representing China at bilateral and multilateral trade agreements. [4]

The Ministry of Commerce is structured into the following departments: [9]

Departments
Foreign Economic Cooperation
Fair Trade for Import and Export
Market Economic Order
Foreign Investment Administration
Market Operation
Aid to Foreign Countries
Treaty and Law
WTO Affairs
Trade in Services
Market System
Comprehensive
Specialized
Commercial Reform
Asian Affairs
Western Asian & African Affairs
American & Oceanian Affairs
International Trade and Economic Affairs
Taiwan, Hong Kong & Macao
General Economic Affairs
Foreign Trade
Electromechanical Products & Science and Technology Industry
Administrative / Corporate Services
General Office
Human Resources
Policy Research
Finance
Injury Investigation
Negotiation Office
Retired Officials
Committee of Communist Party
Discipline Supervision & Investigation Group
Bureau of Discipline Supervision
Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation
World Economy
Consumption and Distribution
International Trade
Foreign Investment
Industry Development and Strategy
Commodity Research
International Trade in Services
Overseas Investment and Economic Cooperation
Asian and African Studies
Development Cooperation
Credit and E-commerce
Strategic Trade and Security

See also

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References

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  9. Archived April 1, 2008, at the Wayback Machine