China’s cyberspace regulator has launched a long-term campaign to cut down on red tape and excessive formalities across government apps and social media.
The directive was issued on Monday by the Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission (CCAC), the Communist Party oversight body that sits at the top of the State Council’s Cyberspace Administration, which was set up to manage internet-related issues.
The document said that government apps, social media accounts and WeChat groups need to be regulated to make tools more user-friendly for the public, instead of being used by officials in evaluations and for departments to show off their levels of digitalisation.
“The prevention and control of ‘formalism on the fingertips’ matters to the image of the party, the popularity among people, the modernisation of the national governance system and governance capacity. It is of great significance in promoting the party’s style of government and social atmosphere,” the directive said.
The campaign, which could last up to five years, came on the heels of President Xi Jinping’s remarks about preventing formalism and bureaucracy last week.
“New versions of formalism and bureaucratism” were on the rise, he warned, adding that grass-roots cadres had to sign in on all sorts of software and accounts, and too many government forums were a waste of money and time.
“This is formalism in the digital new age, and it’s another way to increase burdens at the grass roots,” the CCAC said.
The directive called for a reduction in “meaningless labour” for local cadres, so that they could focus more of their time and energy on doing actual work to increase convenience and efficiency for the general public.
According to the directive, a mechanism must be built within two years that evaluates digital tools, collects feedback and allows cancellations. Within five years, measures must be in place “to prevent formalism from rebounding or mutating”.
Software to govern the system must be designed to enhance convenience, and apps should not have duplicated functions, the directive said, adding that those that are not used frequently or are not practical should be scrapped.
The document said government social media and apps should be used because they are practical, not because they are required by superiors, and the usage of online tools should not be included in daily evaluations, such as the number of shares or the length of time used.
Numerous reports have previously appeared in state media about useless online and social media tools that create extra work for local cadres.
One community official told party mouthpiece People’s Daily they had dozens of WeChat groups for work projects and needed to check in every day. Another official said bosses had asked them to help to urge the public to install government software on their phones, so that download quotas could be met for particular departments.
The report did single out one city for praise. A campaign in Zhangye in the northwest province of Gansu was able to cut workloads for cadres by reducing government WeChat work groups by 45% and QQ groups by 47%. Other cities had called for removing criteria such as online voting or following WeChat accounts to evaluate cadres, and instead assessing them by the actual, practical work they did, the report said. – South China Morning Post