"The new commission would to a large extent integrate supervisory power, which would be of great importance to rebuilding the image of Shanxi Province," said Wang Jianzhen, a local entrepreneur and also a deputy to the provincial legislature.
Wang said he was confident about the prospect of the supervisory commission system.
"The new system, which helps restrict exercise of power, will enable companies to deal with government departments in a more transparent way and, therefore, better serve the economy of the province," echoed Yuan Sen, a Shanxi lawmaker and technician from a local aluminum plant.
Provincial-level supervisory commissions will be set up by the end of March, and prefectural- and county- level commissions will be established before June in the three pilot locations, according to the country's top discipline watchdog.
To advance the reform, Beijing, Shanxi and Zhejiang set up working groups for improving the supervision system reform last year, which were headed by Party chiefs of the three places.
Under the pilot scheme, supervisory commissions are authorized to supervise, investigate and impose punishment on all public employees in the three pilot regions.
Zhu Lijia, professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance, said multiple means are needed to realize full-coverage supervision over all employees with public power.
The databases on public employees should be set up as soon as possible, suggested Zhu, who also lauded the effective supervision by the masses.
【国内英语资讯: China Focus: Pilot supervisory reform sees key progress】相关文章:
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