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Corrupt Chinese officials flee overseas, some bound for Australia

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Corrupt Chinese officials flee overseas, some bound for Australia
Date
February 25, 2014 - 10:07PM

Philip Wen
China correspondent for Fairfax Media

Beijing: Corrupt Chinese officials are fleeing overseas in increasing numbers to countries including Australia as an intensifying crackdown on graft takes hold within the ruling Communist Party, according to a new government think tank report.

The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a prestigious government-controlled think tank, urged stricter monitoring of what it termed “naked officials” - those whose spouses or children have migrated overseas and were therefore likely potential recipients of illicit funds from within China.

"The phenomenon of the flight of officials is likely to escalate, particularly under the current anti-graft wave," said Lu Yanbin, a researcher at the academy and co-author of the report, which was published on Monday. "Corrupt cadres are running out of places to live in this country."

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Corruption crackdown: China's President Xi Jinping Photo: Reuters

President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption chief, Wang Qishan, promised in January that the Communist Party would increase efforts to punish officials who attempt to flee overseas. This has included new regulations which block promotions for those “naked officials” found to have immediate family members based abroad.

“Past experience shows that the most popular destinations [for corrupt officials] are the US, Canada, and Australia,” said Hu Xingdou, an economics professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology. “Australia has already become a major recipient country [of Chinese corrupt officials].”

Australia’s popularity, Mr Hu said, could spike after Canada this month scrapped an investment immigration program that had been in operation for 28 years, after a crush of applications of wealthy Chinese mainlanders. About 45,000 applicants from China have been cancelled as a result, just as Australia ramps up its new significant investor visa program, which requires at least $5 million initial investment.

An estimated 1.2 million Chinese officials have immediate family abroad. Central Party School anti-corruption expert Lin Zhe said there was no guarantee the government’s new regulations would help curb the problem of “naked officials” fleeing, given previous attempts have proved ineffective.

“You can say these laws have reduced the opportunities for naked officials to flee,” Ms Lin told Global People magazine. “But in practice, its effectiveness has been lacking.”

A previous report from the CASS said more than 18,000 officials fled the country between 1995 and 2008, smuggling out assets totalling 800 billion yuan ($145 billion). In one week alone last year, the state-run Economic Observer newspaper reported 714 government officials fled overseas and did not return.

A separate report by the Boston Consulting Group last year said the movement of funds overseas from mainland China each year amounted to 3 per cent of China’s GDP.

This year’s CASS report also warned against senior officials promoting their aides and creating a "secretary gang" that may breed "organised crime and major violations", in an apparent reference to the former security tsar Zhou Yongkang. At least four of his former secretaries are under investigation for corruption.

Former Zhou aides being investigated include Ji Wenlin, the former deputy governor of Hainan, and Li Hualin, a former senior executive at state-owned oil giant China National Petroleum Corporation.

China’s anti-corruption body, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, said it investigated 51,000 people for corruption, bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power, and a total of 30,420 officials were punished last year for violating new party rules aimed at avoiding pomp and ceremony.

With Sanghee Liu

Read more: Corrupt Chinese officials flee overseas, some bound for Australia
 
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It's time to significantly reduce the number of officials in the communist party. Far too many officials mean its impossible to monitor them and give rise to more corruption. So much money is being stolen from the Chinese economy and Chinese society from these corrupt officials that could have gone towards higher military spending, higher education spending or higher healthcare spending.
 
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These corrupted officials accumulated the wealth not only by directly accepting bribes, but also from business operations. Liu Han, the former top rich in Sichuan, sold two hydropower station for 500 million to a Chinese businessmen running foreign company that registered in Cayman Island. Then this company again sold them to a state-owned company for 2.5 billion. Many people suspect this "foreign company" is actually in control of officials, but no solid evidence.

In past 3 decades, the law is not so effective or constitutionally limited to officials, they can do whatever they want, but now, things are different, officials are very very careful, they are afraid of being disclosed or prosecuted, at least, it's a progress. Next step, we need to put more pressure on officials, regulate them to serve most common people. Recently many signs have revealed that the attached benefits(for example 过节费) of officials in local government have been removed, many officials in Guangdong quit and start to run business. This is definitely a good thing.
 
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it's a process, China has huge pollution problems, education is still better abroad, western passports can go to more places, luxury items cost less, and a lot of things that China still need to improve.

Give it time. We are already getting people to come to China, that's a start, with time and economic developments, China will become more and more attractive, especially if we kick out the US out of our backyard, that prestige alone would help.


Patience that's what's needed though often lacks. It took close to 40 decades of work to reach here, China wasn't built in a day and nor would our problems be gone in a day.
 
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It's time to significantly reduce the number of officials in the communist party. Far too many officials mean its impossible to monitor them and give rise to more corruption. So much money is being stolen from the Chinese economy and Chinese society from these corrupt officials that could have gone towards higher military spending, higher education spending or higher healthcare spending.

China currently has about 10 million civil servants. Per capita, this is lower than that of the US and European nation.
http://www.eai.nus.edu.sg/BB493.pdf
While many part of the Chinese political governing structures are undergoing reforms to iron out inefficiencies, it really isn't something overly simple like "reduce the number of officials". Government needs people to keep the country running, especially a nation as large as China. Plus, judging by how the village level elections has gone down, an individual that is part of the party is a lot more trust worthy since there is significantly less amount of buying the votes involved.

Fighting corruption is neither a short term nor easy task. There is no magical "easy" way to fix it. It take time and it takes continuous and consistent efforts.
 
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it's a process, China has huge pollution problems, education is still better abroad, western passports can go to more places, luxury items cost less, and a lot of things that China still need to improve.

Give it time. We are already getting people to come to China, that's a start, with time and economic developments, China will become more and more attractive, especially if we kick out the US out of our backyard, that prestige alone would help.


Patience that's what's needed though often lacks. It took close to 40 decades of work to reach here, China wasn't built in a day and nor would our problems be gone in a day.

Taxing luxury items heavily is one thing that I believe the Chinese government does right. It's one of those taxes that doesn't really affect frugal ordinary citizens, and allow the government to take back at least some of the money lost through corruption.

Corrupted officials can't resist luxury items, and consumption taxes are generally much harder to dodge than other taxes.

Much better than how my government taxes income and corporation relatively heavily, but the richest ones avoid the tax through loopholes and then send the money overseas buying less taxed luxury goods.
 
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Death sentence for corrupt Party boss

ZHENGZHOU -- Disgraced former Guangdong Party bigwig Zhou Zhenhong was sentenced to death with two years' reprieve on Fridayfor taking bribes.

Zhou, former head of the United Front Work Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) of Guangdong provincial committee,took bribes worth of more than 24.6 million yuan ($4.3 million) between 2002 and 2011, according to Xinyang Intermediate People'sCourt in Henan Province.

The court also ruled that Zhou could not provide a proper explanation for other assets worth more than 37 million yuan.

All the money has since been recovered, and the court ordered for the confiscation of all of Zhou's personal property.
 
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It's time to significantly reduce the number of officials in the communist party. Far too many officials mean its impossible to monitor them and give rise to more corruption. So much money is being stolen from the Chinese economy and Chinese society from these corrupt officials that could have gone towards higher military spending, higher education spending or higher healthcare spending.

Maybe its time to move to a democracy where the citizens choose who their leaders are?
 
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It's not worse. You get to choose who your leaders are. If they are corrupt or incompetent you can simply kick them out and replace them with someone who isnt.

It's better than unelected "party officials" being appointed by their corrupt friends.
 
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It's not worse. You get to choose who your leaders are. If they are corrupt or incompetent you can simply kick them out and replace them with someone who isnt.

It's better than unelected "party officials" being appointed by their corrupt friends.

No, you get to choose who your leaders are. If they are corrupt or incompetent you can simply kick them out and replace them with someone who is equally corrupt and possible more more incompetent. Xi has to spend decades to prove that he is a better governor than his dozens of rivals and he won a contest of governing skill. Your leader just have to win a popularity contest over the course of few month.
 
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It's not worse. You get to choose who your leaders are. If they are corrupt or incompetent you can simply kick them out and replace them with someone who isnt.

It's better than unelected "party officials" being appointed by their corrupt friends.

democrazy is corrupt. Bribery is part of democrazy. Politicians are sold to the highest bidder.
 
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It does happen, but luckily we have elections to boot them out. You don't have that liberty.

What's worse than an elected corrupt official? An unelected one that can't be fired.
 
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QQ截图20140301224806.jpg


In west, political contribution is legalized through constitution, very detail rule about the limit of contribution could be found online by everyone. They set rules for individuals to give up to $2,600 to each candidate or candidate committee per election, or $32,400 to national party committee per calendar year etc. They also prohibit some contributions like cash contributions or contributions from corporations, labor organizations and national banks. This limit is adjusted every year according to inflation rate.

Contributions Brochure

In short, they legalized this bribery, make it subordinated to the constitutional framework, make it public to every citizen. What China should learn is to achieve a fair legal system to make sure everything operates under its normal way, no political influence could distort the justice. Only in this way, our leaders will have very few possibility to directly intervene in events that's far beyond their own jurisdiction. Only if everyone does his own job and leave alone other's job, that is to say everybody never cross the line, corruption will be solved.

We know democracy works well in west and developed countries, but democracy is not suitable for current China. The most urgent thing is to achieve a fair legal system.

@xdrive
 
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It's not worse. You get to choose who your leaders are. If they are corrupt or incompetent you can simply kick them out and replace them with someone who isnt.

It's better than unelected "party officials" being appointed by their corrupt friends.
same shit, different colour. *** clown 1 vs. *** clown 2. No thanks. No merit in democracy, only based on populism.
 
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