Advanced Search

Administrative Measures On Market Intermediary Organizations In Hebei Province

Original Language Title: 河北省市场中介组织管理办法

Subscribe to a Global-Regulation Premium Membership Today!

Key Benefits:

Subscribe Now for only USD$40 per month.

Chapter I General

Article 1 strengthens the management of market intermediary organizations, regulates the conduct of market brokering organizations, preserves the market order of brokering services, guarantees the legitimate rights and interests of market broker service providers, promotes the health development of market brokering organizations, and develops this approach in line with the relevant laws, regulations and regulations.

Article 2 engages in market brokering services in the administration of this province, as well as overseeing the management of market intermediaries and their practitioners.

Article 3. This approach refers to the following organizations that have been established by law by the business administration and provide paid services to the commissioner and assume corresponding responsibilities:

(i) Independent auditing organizations such as accounting;

(ii) Assessments such as assets, land, mineral resources, security, property, environmental impacts, water impacts, occupational diseases, and evaluation organizations;

(iii) Identification, identification, identification, etc.;

(iv) The institution of institutions such as construction works;

(v) Services organizations such as the law, the home and the archives;

(vi) Advisory organizations such as information, credit, technology, engineering and market surveys;

(vii) Presentation organizations such as vocational, talent, marriage and education;

(viii) Acting organizations such as business registration, advertising, trademarks, patents, tax, real estate, tendering, auctions, logistics and private entry;

(ix) Financial brokering organizations, such as insurance, securities, freight and security;

(x) Other intermediary organizations consistent with the provisions of this approach.

Article IV engages in market brokering services and should be governed by laws, regulations and regulations, in accordance with the principles of integrity, equity, adherence to the rules and ethics of the industry, safeguarding the interests of the State, the public interest and the legitimate rights and interests of the author.

Article 5 Governments of more people at the district level should integrate market brokering services into national economic and social development planning, establish regulatory coordination mechanisms for market brokering organizations, develop and implement enabling policies for the development of market brokering organizations, and optimize the development environment of market brokering services.

Article 6

Article 7 supports and directs the establishment of trade associations by market intermediaries. Industry associations should strengthen industry self-regulation by leading market intermediary organizations to provide services in accordance with the law, promote industry integrity and provide information, training, advice and services to members.

Market intermediaries and their practitioners are encouraged to join industry associations. Laws, administrative regulations stipulate that market brokering organizations or market brokering organizations and their practitioners should join industry associations from their provisions.

Article 8. Any unit and person who violates this approach by market intermediary organizations and their practitioners or other acts of law, shall be entitled to lodge complaints, report to the authorities of the market intermediary organizations.

The authorities of the market intermediary should establish a sound complaints, reporting system, and publicize surveillance telephones, e-mails and communication addresses to society. Complaints and reporting authorities should be dealt with by law.

Chapter II Establishment

Article 9. The establishment of a market intermediary organization shall apply by law to the business administration to register and receive a business licence. Laws, administrative regulations have special provisions for market intermediary organizations, from which they are provided.

Foreign legal persons, other organizations and individuals have been established or involved in the establishment of market intermediaries in my province, in accordance with the relevant laws, regulations and regulations.

Article 10 Laws, administrative regulations stipulate that market intermediary organizations and their practitioners have a system of qualifications, qualifications, and that market intermediary organizations and their practitioners should have the corresponding qualifications and qualifications in accordance with the law.

The State does not provide for a system of eligibility for practitioners from market intermediaries, and practitioners from market intermediaries should have the knowledge and skills necessary to carry out their operations.

Other administrative licences should be obtained by law in connection with market brokering services, which should be governed by law.

Article 11 encourages market intermediary organizations to operate on a scale basis to enhance the quality and competitiveness of services organized by market intermediaries.

New market intermediary organizations are encouraged to adopt corporate systems, and the former market intermediary organizations are eligible for change.

Article 12

The staff of the State organs or the legal, regulatory and regulatory authorities shall not be allowed to organize their functions in the market.

Chapter III

Article 13. Market intermediary organizations engage in market brokering services under the law, and their acts are protected by law and no units and individuals may intervene.

Organizations that have the authority to administer the functions of public affairs and their staff shall not use the authority to accept the services provided by their designated market intermediary organizations.

Article 14. Market intermediary organizations shall, in accordance with the provisions of the relevant evidence, communicate services projects, service norms, fees standards, names of supervisory bodies and matters such as telephone surveillance.

Market intermediaries use the Organization's website to engage in market brokering services, and matters set out in the notices of the organization's website.

Article 15. When market intermediary organizations publish information on the use of special industrial licences, voucher management services such as the provision of a chapter-critical, lock-breaking locks, they should be marked by a significant location of service information or a licence number of industrial licences.

Article 16 provides brokering services, and contracts should be concluded with the author through written, oral or other forms. A written form should be adopted by law, administrative regulations or by the parties.

Article 17

Market intermediary organizations should implement the relevant provisions of government pricing or government guidance.

Article 18 Market intermediary organizations should establish a system of business records, such as record-keeping operations, and properly preserve raw vouchers, books, brokering service contracts and operational records.

The maintenance period of information such as original vouchers, books, brokering service contracts and operational records shall not be less than two years. The laws, regulations and regulations also provide for their provisions.

Article 19 Industrial brokering organizations and their practitioners shall not have the following acts:

(i) Provide information or information that may endanger national security, undermine public interest;

(ii) Disinformation on services;

(iii) Provision of false information or information, forfeiture, conversion or voucher, false reporting, documentation or other documents;

(iv) Provision of brokering services on behalf of others, or allowing others to engage in brokering services in the name of the Organization and themselves;

(v) The use of unjustifiable means of concealing, fraud, coercion and malicious collation to undermine the interests of the author or others;

(vi) Discribe differential treatment or discrimination against the author without reasonable conditions;

(vii) Disclosure of the commercial secret or personal privacy of the commissionor;

(viii) To request, receive payments other than contractual agreements or other property;

(ix) To use samples, fines, bonds, advances or other business to gain undue benefits;

(x) Forced or transcended others to accept brokering services;

(xi) Other acts prohibited by law, regulations and regulations.

Chapter IV Credit management

Article 20 Governments of more people at the district level should strengthen market brokers to organize credit systems, establish credit records and disclosure systems for market intermediaries and their practitioners, and make credits an important basis for implementing credit classification management.

Article 21, the authorities of the market intermediary organizations should establish credit files for market intermediaries and their practitioners, classify the relevant credit information, document the licensing, day-to-day monitoring of inspection findings, the investigation of violations, etc., and make public and real updates to society by law.

The criteria for the classification of credits by market intermediaries and their practitioners are developed by the authorities of the Provincial Government's Market Intermediation Organization. The laws, regulations and regulations also provide for their provisions.

Article 2

The market brokering authorities should bring the relevant information collected to the market's main credit information system in a timely, accurate and complete manner.

Article 23 of the Industrial Intermediation Organization and its practitioners have been included in the credit file, and the authorities of the market intermediary should communicate in writing to the parties and hear their presentations and pleas that the parties' reasonable views should be adopted.

Article 24 provides for market intermediary organizations and their practitioners who are misconceptive, and the authorities of market intermediaries should take measures to strengthen oversight management and, in the light of their circumstances, be made available to society by market intermediary authorities through the media, or by the law, to the extent that they are engaged in market brokering services.

Article 25 has serious misconceptions by market intermediary organizations, which have not been delegated to brokering services within three years from the date of incorporation into the credit file.

The practitioners of the market intermediary organizations have been misconceptive and have not participated in pre-exploitation activities organized by the authorities of the district-level people and the market intermediary organizations within three years from the date of the credit file.

Chapter V Oversight management

Article 26 The authorities of the market intermediary organizations should conduct oversight inspections of market brokering organizations and their practitioners, in accordance with the division of management authority and responsibilities, and carry out operational guidance and supervision of the activities of industry associations and investigate the relevant offences under the law.

In the course of monitoring inspections, the authorities of the market intermediary organizations and their practitioners found that the offences committed by market intermediary organizations and their practitioners are not covered by this sector and should be transferred in a timely manner. The sectors to be transferred should be governed by law and feedback to the transfer sector should be required and feedback should be provided within five working days after the closure.

The following measures may be taken when the authorities of the Market Intermedia Organization conduct oversight inspections of market brokering organizations and their practitioners:

(i) Access to investigations into places related to oversight matters;

(ii) Information on units and individuals subject to scrutiny;

(iii) Access, recording, replication of information relating to inspection matters, vouchers, brokering service contracts and operational records;

(iv) Other measures under laws, regulations and regulations.

Article 29 governs the supervision of market brokering organizations and their practitioners without prejudice to their normal operating activities, without request, receipt of property or other benefits, and the confidentiality of commercial secrets and personal privacy involved in oversight inspections.

The authorities of the market broker should cooperate with the relevant units and individuals when they are inspected by law, and in accordance with the information requested, the staff shall not be prevented from carrying out their duties under the law.

Chapter VI Legal responsibility

Article 31: Organizations and their staff authorized by the executive branch and the law, which are responsible for the management of the functions of public affairs, shall be treated in accordance with the law, which constitutes an offence and hold criminal responsibility under the law:

(i) In breach of the provision for the organization of administrative licences for market intermediaries or shall be subject to administrative licences;

(ii) To use its mandate to limit the services provided by its designated market intermediary organizations;

(iii) Demand that market intermediary organizations provide non-reimbursable services for them;

(iv) The publication of credit information on market brokering organizations and their practitioners by law;

(v) To request, receive or otherwise benefit from inspection;

(vi) The investigation of complaints, reporting matters is not dealt with by law.

Article 32, in violation of article 14 of this approach, provides that no name of the supervisory authority and supervision of the telephone, is being converted by the authorities of the market intermediary to the time limit, with a fine of one thousand dollars overdue.

Article 33, in violation of article 18 of this approach, provides that one of the following cases is changed by an act of responsibility by the authorities of the market intermediary to impose a fine of more than five thousand dollars:

(i) No system of record-keeping;

(ii) No actual record of business;

(iii) No information, such as original vouchers, books, brokering service contracts and operational records, has been maintained for the specified period.

In violation of article 19, paragraphs 1 to 3, 5 and 7 to X of this approach, the authorities of the Market Intermedia Organization are responsible for changing orders, imposing a fine of up to 30,000 yen for market brokering organizations and imposing a fine of more than five thousand dollars for practitioners of the market intermediary organizations.

Article XV, in violation of article 19, paragraphs 4, 6 and 6, of this approach, is being corrected by the authorities of the Market Intermedia Organization, with a fine of more than five thousand dollars for market intermediaries and a fine of up to five thousand dollars for the practitioners of the market intermediary organizations.

Article 36, which violates this approach by market intermediary organizations and their practitioners, provides for administrative penalties that are provided for by law, regulations and regulations; imposes liability under the law for the commissionor or the other person for loss; constitutes a crime and hold criminal liability in accordance with the law.

Chapter VII

Article 37 regulates the management of individual businessmen engaged in market brokering services, taking into account this approach.

Article 338 is implemented effective 1 January 2016.