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Heilongjiang Provincial Price Monitoring

Original Language Title: 黑龙江省价格监测办法

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Moroon Province's price monitoring approach

(Adopted at the 48th ordinary meeting of the Government of the Blackonang Province on 28 December 2010 and issued by Decree No. 1 of 5 January 2011 for the People's Government of the Blackonang Province, effective 1 February 2011)

Article 1 promotes economic and social health development, in line with the provisions of laws, regulations and regulations such as the People's Republic of China price law, in order to ensure that price monitoring results are true, accurate, and that it plays an important role in macroeconomic regulation, and develops this approach in line with the provisions of this province.

The price monitoring referred to in Article II of this approach refers to activities such as price tracking, collection, analysis, forecasting, early warning, reporting and publication by price authorities.

The types of goods and services referred to in the preceding paragraph are determined according to the type published by the price authorities of the State. Provincial price authorities may complement the types of important goods and services as required.

Article 3. This approach applies to price monitoring within the territorial administration.

Article IV. Governments of more people at the district level should strengthen their leadership in price monitoring, strengthen the building of the basis for price monitoring, incorporate the requirements for price monitoring into the current Government's financial budget and guarantee the normal conduct of price monitoring.

The price authorities at the district level are responsible for the monitoring of prices within the present administration.

Sectors such as finance, commerce, agriculture, food, statistics, business, health, construction and livestock should support and synchronize price monitoring within their respective responsibilities.

Governments with price monitoring responsibilities should strengthen information exchange with price authorities and achieve resource sharing.

The director-general of Stereotechnicians is responsible for focusing on price monitoring in national forest areas, and is operationally guided and monitored by provincial price authorities.

Article 6. Civil, legal and other organizations should support and cooperate with price authorities in carrying out price monitoring in accordance with the law.

Article 7. The basic task of price monitoring is:

(i) Establish price monitoring reporting systems;

(ii) Identification of price monitoring point units;

(iii) Monitoring, analysis of prices, costs and market demand changes;

(iv) To follow up on important economic policies, measures reflecting in the area of price;

(v) Implement price forecasting, early warning and emergency monitoring and make timely recommendations;

(vi) Publication of price monitoring information;

(vii) Organizing price monitoring training and evaluation of staff, providing guidance to heads of price monitoring units and price monitoring of bidders;

(viii) Other price monitoring efforts provided by States and provinces.

Article 8. Provincial price authorities should develop a system of provincial price monitoring, in accordance with the relevant provisions of national price monitoring, taking into account the realities of economic activities in the province and the needs of the Government's macroeconomic decision-making.

The Government's price authorities at the municipal, district level should develop the price monitoring system for the current administrative region, in line with the relevant provisions of national and provincial price monitoring, and report on the top-level price authorities.

Article 9 above-level price authorities should submit price monitoring reports in a timely manner to the Government of the current people and the parent price authorities.

The price monitoring report should include the following:

(i) Monitoring changes in prices of goods and services;

(ii) Costs associated with the monitored price of goods and services and changes in market access;

(iii) An important economic policy, the impact of measures on market prices and the need to reflect;

(iv) Analysis of trends in changes in prices of goods and services monitored, early warning;

(v) The response and recommendations of the price management;

(vi) Other elements related to the monitored price of goods and services.

Article 10 Price monitoring should be based on the primary approach of targeted price monitoring and cyclical price monitoring to collect, collate, analyse data on price monitoring, in conjunction with specific surveys, interim surveys, non-settlement monitoring, market perceptions. Based on specific and emergency monitoring needs, price authorities can collect price information on goods and services to non-settlement monitoring units.

Article 11. The price authorities at the district level should have a sound price monitoring network system, open price monitoring information channels and improved price monitoring tools.

Article 12 above-level price authorities shall determine price monitoring units within the current administrative area, in accordance with the price monitoring reporting system, and file with the parent price authorities. The agreed price monitoring unit should not be dismissed without justification.

Article 13. The price monitoring point unit shall have the following conditions:

(i) A fixed production, operation space;

(ii) Persons with task of price monitoring;

(iii) Productive, operated or service prices can reflect local prices for the same-class goods and services;

(iv) Business credibility and strong social responsibility;

(v) The availability of price monitoring data collection and transmission tools;

(vi) Other conditions under the price monitoring system.

Article 14. The price authorities at the district level shall, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the State and the province, issue a price monitoring certificate or a mark free of charge to the price monitoring unit.

Article 15. The price monitoring point unit should establish an internal regulatory system for price monitoring in accordance with the relevant provisions of the district-level price authorities, design of price-monitoring data for special or part-time personnel, and send price monitoring information.

The price monitoring data provided by the price monitoring point unit should be timely, real, accurate and complete. Price monitoring units may not be delayed, concealed, reported, refused or falsely, storing price monitoring data.

Article 17 above-level price authorities should review, verify and ensure the authenticity, accuracy and integrity of price monitoring data.

More than 18 per cent of the price authorities at the district level should provide guidance on the price monitoring exercise for the price monitoring unit, provide information on the prices of goods and services that are not reimbursed by the price monitoring unit, and free training of the head of the price monitoring unit and the requisitioner.

Article 19 above-level price authorities and the financial sector should grant price monitoring subsidies to price-monitoring units, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the State and the province, mainly for the labour expenditure of bidders.

Article 20: Price monitoring orders cannot be made in a timely, real, accurate and complete supply of price-monitoring data for the production, operationable adjustment or other reasons, and price authorities should adjust in a timely manner to recover the price-monitoring certificate and markers and report the top-level price authorities.

Article 21 above-level price authorities should establish and improve price monitoring early warning, emergency reporting systems.

In one of the major goods and services prices in the present administration, price authorities should initiate early-warning mechanisms for price monitoring, implement emergency price monitoring, submit price silo monitoring early warning reports in a timely manner to the current people's governments and the top-level price authorities and make recommendations for responses.

(i) A greater volatility in prices of important goods and services;

(ii) The emergence of competition and the purchase of important commodities;

(iii) A marked increase in the frequency of purchase of related commodities;

(iv) Other cases of emergency monitoring should be initiated.

Article 2 above-level price authorities should be made public in accordance with the law of key goods and services prices in the present administration.

Article 23 above-level price authorities and their staff should be kept confidential and shall not be used for other purposes other than government macroeconomic management and price work.

Article 24 provides that the price monitoring staff shall have the expertise required to carry out the price monitoring exercise and obtain a price monitoring survey certificate issued by national price authorities.

Article 25. When price monitoring staff are monitoring, trajectory and survey, price monitoring surveys should be presented.

Article 26 presents one of the following acts, and the price authorities should be responsible for correcting the price authorities; the cancellation of the price-monitoring unit certificate or marker, and the fine of up to one thousand dollars, depending on the circumstances:

(i) Distinction, rejection of price monitoring data;

(ii) Restatements, seizure of price monitoring data;

(iii) Fering, storing price monitoring data.

Article 27 above-level price authorities do not carry out price surveys, monitoring, inspection, judging, as prescribed, without timely, real, accurate and complete reporting on price-monitoring data, to be corrected by the parent price authorities; and refuse to correct them to inform them.

The price authorities at the district level monitor a staff member with one of the following acts, which is criticized by the principal price authorities; in serious circumstances, are directly responsible to the competent and other responsible personnel, which are subject to administrative disposition by the relevant departments and are criminally criminalized by law:

(i) Failure to carefully review and verify data on price monitoring, resulting in errors in price monitoring data, affecting the accuracy and authenticity of price monitoring data;

(ii) Non-implementation of price monitoring systems that affect the normal conduct of price monitoring;

(iii) Expropriation of reports, retreats or the modification of price data;

(iv) Disclosure of data by country secrets and commercial secrets;

(v) The use of price monitoring data for other purposes other than government macroeconomic regulation and price work.

The twenty-eighth approach is implemented effective 1 February 172.