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BEIJING, June 26 (Xinhuanet) -- China is expected to clarify the legal
responsibility of those who make state assets lost through management buyouts
(MBO) in small and medium-sized state-owned enterprises at low prices.
The Property Rights Law draft under consideration here by China's top
legislature says that administrative staff in small and medium-sized state-owned
enterprises must bear the civil, administrative or even criminal liabilities if
they transfer the ownership of the public property by buying stocks or selling
companies at low prices, which lead to the public assets loss.
The law aims to protect the state-owned assets, which are the economic
pillar in China, according to an official with the National People's Congress
(NPC) Standing Committee.
In small and medium-sized state-owned enterprises, MBO reform is allowed
but strictly regulated by the a draft regulation issuedin April this year.
While MBO has been increasingly used to make state-owned companies into
private ones in recent years, managers were often found cheating or engaged in
malpractice damaging the interests ofemployees, investors and financial
institutions but bringing themselves private gains.
According to official statistic, China losses 40 billion yuan (4.8 billion
US dollars) of state-owned assets annually. There are tens of trillions yuan of
state-owned assets under the supervisionof governments at all levels in the
country.
The loss of the state-owned assets has triggered dissatisfaction and
condemnation across the country, as many companies' employees appealed to the
governments for intervention.
"Standardizing the MBO by enacting a law is significant as it is a stride
forward in the property rights reform of China's state-owned companies," said Li
Shuguang, professor of China University of Political Science and Law. Enditem
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