The Prime Minister's Working Group on
Administrative Reform has ordered ministries, People's Committees and Councils,
Government agencies and State-owned enterprises to renew their effort to reduce
their administrative costs by 30 per cent.
The
group had identified 256 procedures at 18 ministries and six provinces and
cities to be given priority for revision and abolition, said its chairman
Government's Office Chief Nguyen Xuan Phuc.
If
approved by Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung as part of the Government's Plan 30
for administrative reform, the streamlined procedures would help save more than
VND6 trillion (US$55 million), he said.
The
chairman said that up to 90 per cent of administrative procedures had been
simplified.
But
savings had been less than 10 per cent.
"The
benefits could be much higher if we can devise effective measures to streamline
more than 5,000 remaining procedures," said Phuc.
These
would help people and enterprises and ensure management targets would be met.
The
group identified the procedures required for building a house; paying taxes;
clearing goods through customs; arranging a health check and registering a
residence as the most troublesome.
Members
of subordinate working groups charged with overseeing administrative reform
agreed the proposed streamling was crucial but warned old-style management and
egos would prove a hurdle to its introduction.
Finance
Ministry Secretariat Chief Nguyen Duc Chi said that although the ministry
continued issuing legal documents to simplify procedures, regulations
introduced by other ministries and agencies added to them.
Labour,
Invalids and Social Affairs Ministry working group chairman Dao Hong Lan said
people seeking administrative reform must be very determined and not be
deterred by other bureaucrats if they were to succeed.
Phuc
said the group had invited the participation of social associations so as to
better understand the aspirations of business and the people and to avoid any
misuse of power.
The
group would now seek the opinions of 50 lawyers as part of the second phase of
Plan 30.
"We
have also invited experts from Europe and South
Korea to compare Viet Nam's administrative
procedures with those of other countries," he said.
Results
of Plan 30
The
first phase of Plan 30 was completed with the establishment of a national
database of administrative procedures last October.
It
was the first time Viet Nam
had put such procedures online and provided public access to 5,700 procedures
and 100,000 forms.
The
database enabled people to know clearly what administrative formalities they
had to complete and at which agency, said Phuc.
The
procedures and documents it provided would be regarded as originals from next
year and applicants would be able to fill them out and print them.
The
Finance Ministry says it has revised 145 procedures and abolished 32, creating
a cost saving of VND2.1 trillion, (about $113.5 million).
It
plans to revise 840 procedures by the end of the year.