NPC Calendar: June 2025

Here is our recap of NPC-related events in June 2025 at our newsletter.

The Preschool Education Law [学前教育法] (adopted on Nov. 8, 2024) and the amendment to the Supervision Law [监察法] (adopted on Dec. 25, 2024) take effect on June 1.

The NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC) is seeking public comment on a draft Ecological and Environmental Code [生态环境法典] through June 13.

The 14th NPCSC will convene for its sixteenth session in late June. The Council of Chairpersons is expected to meet in mid-June to decide on the agenda and dates of the session.

According to the NPCSC’s 2025 legislative work plan, the following bills will return for further review:

The draft Atomic Energy Law [原子能法] and draft revision to the Arbitration Law [仲裁法] may also return for further review.

In addition, the session is expected to review the newly submitted Healthcare Security Law [医疗保障法] and amendment to the Food Safety Law [食品安全法], and may also take up one or more of the other bills scheduled for an initial review this year by the NPCSC’s 2025 legislative work plan.

China’s New Private Economy Promotion Law: Good Intentions Meet Weak Government Accountability

Editor’s Note: After a fast-tracked legislative process spanning just over a year, China’s national legislature, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, approved the Private Economy Promotion Law [民营经济促进法] on April 30. During that time, it reviewed the bill at three consecutive sessions—in December 2024, February 2025, and April 2025—and published (only) the first draft for public comment. Following the Law’s second review, friend of the site and Senior Fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center Jamie P. Horsley authored a commentary for the Brookings Institution, in which she argues:

The first draft . . . contains little new in terms of legal or policy initiatives, apart from its somewhat problematic definition of promoted private businesses. It restates existing policies and legal requirements that have failed to resolve the sector’s legal challenges, emphasizes political correctness, and seems unlikely to succeed on its own to substantially reassure private investors and spark entrepreneurial enthusiasm. [And] the draft notably excludes majority foreign-owned companies and maintains a segregation of the Chinese economy into state, [domestic] private, and foreign-owned sectors.

In this follow-up piece, Horsley highlights notable new clauses in the Law’s final version and identifies several measures that lawmakers could have incorporated to improve government compliance with the Law but ultimately did not.

By Jamie P. Horsley

Neon signs on Nanjing Road, Shanghai’s main shopping district. Photo by Luciano Mortula-LGM (stock.adobe.com).

China’s first “foundational” [基础性] law intended to support and regulate its crucial domestic private sector, the Private Economy Promotion Law (PEPL), was promulgated on April 30 and takes effect on May 20, 2025. In official commentary surrounding its drafting and adoption, authorities recognized that the private sector has faced “difficulties and challenges in terms of fair participation in market competition, equal use of production factors, obtaining investment and financing support and service guarantees, and protection of legitimate rights and interests,” due in large part, as the PEPL makes clear, to Chinese government failures to abide by legal requirements. Official commentary also asserted that the PEPL now provides a legal guarantee and institutional support for its “sustained, healthy, and high-quality development.” However, the final PEPL, like the earlier drafts discussed in my previous analysis, contains little new in terms of substantive legal requirements, protections, or policy. It rather serves to emphasize and fortify pre-existing laws—including the state Constitution—and policies that apply to, but have not been uniformly and fairly implemented with respect to, the private sector.

Continue reading “China’s New Private Economy Promotion Law: Good Intentions Meet Weak Government Accountability”

China’s National Legislature Releases 2025 Legislative Plan

On Wednesday, May 14, China’s national legislature, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPCSC), released its legislative work plan for 2025 (Plan). The Plan was preliminarily approved by the Council of Chairpersons in December 2024 and finalized on April 18. It sets forth priorities for all aspects of the NPCSC’s legislative work in 2025, which include a list of legislative projects slated for review or research this year. Other aspects of the NPCSC’s legislative work include conducting constitutional review of draft laws, improving legislative procedure, raising public awareness of the NPC’s legislative activities, and offering guidance to local people’s congresses. As usual, we will focus on the list of legislative projects in this post.

Continue reading “China’s National Legislature Releases 2025 Legislative Plan”