Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
Sell Buy Corporation Information
Home > Resources
Manage
Chinese court awards US$25,500 in video piracy case
Ikea mainland sales soar 38 percent in 2007
Central Bank: Annual inflation likely to exceed govt's 3% target
World's most overpriced real estate markets
French retailer Carrefour staff held in bribery probe
Sinopec's H1 profit may rise at fastest pace
Resources
China to issue 20 bln yuan of certificate T-bonds
China replaces Japan as Australia's top trade partner
China adopts anti-monopoly law
China issues 600 bln yuan of special treasury bonds
China to ban all tobacco advertising by 2011
China, ASEAN agree to raise product safety
Industry
Civil aviation industry 'developing too fast'
Blue-chips send market to new high
Banks, steel push stocks higher
Shanghai stocks tumble amid massive global losses
Chinese share prices close higher for seventh straight trading day
Metal pushes Shanghai stocks to new high
AmCham-China speaks highly of China's new anti-monopoly law
BEIJING, Sept. 1 (Xinhua) -- The American Chamber of Commerce of China (AmCham-China) has said that it welcomes the promulgation of the new Anti-Monopoly Law as a positive step in China's economic development.


AmCham-China Chairman James Zimmerman on Friday described the law as a "defining moment in the development of China's legal system, which establishes a basic framework to build a fair, uniform, and national competition law system that benefits consumers by recognizing and preserving the incentives to compete."


The law was passed by China's top legislature on Thursday and will come into effect on Aug. 1, 2008.


Over the past seven years, the Chinese government has invited the chamber and its members to provide written comments on various drafts of the Anti-Monopoly Law.


"We applaud the Chinese government for receiving extensive comments and suggestions from foreign enforcement authorities, scholars, antitrust lawyers, and industry groups," said Zimmerman.


AmCham-China appreciates the Chinese government's willingness to consider the experiences and perspectives of foreign countries in formulating its competition policy, he said.


According to Zimmerman, the promulgation of the Anti-Monopoly Law is only the first step in the establishment of a comprehensive, nationwide competition regime.


The chamber looks forward to further efforts to enhance law enforcement, he said.


Zimmerman expressed the hope that China's competition authorities will focus on modern economic principles and prevailing international practices when applying the law.


AmCham-China is an organization representing the interests of more than 2400 U.S. companies and individuals engaged in business in China.


About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2005-2010,www.863171.net Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.