NPC Calendar: February 2026

UPDATE (Feb. 2, 2026): The NPCSC announced on February 2 that it will hold its 20th session on an emergency basis on February 4.

The NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC) is seeking public comment on a draft revision to the Trademark Law [商标法] through February 9.

The 14th NPCSC will convene for its 21st session in late February. The Council of Chairpersons is expected to meet before the Lunar New Year holiday (which starts on February 15) to decide on the agenda and the dates of the session.

The NPCSC will primarily make preparations for the 2026 NPC session at its upcoming meeting, but may still review one or two of these bills:

China Amends Common Language Law to Expand Mandarin Use

Entrance to Ihlas Supermarket in Kashgar, Xinjiang on August 19, 2018. The top red banner says, in Chinese and Uyghur, “Communication starts with Putonghua.” The photographer pointed out that “the Chinese term ‘Putonghua’ [was] translated into Uyghur literally as ‘the common language.’” They also noted that the whiteboard seen above the handrail had a bilingual list of hospital-related terms titled “Learn the National Language: One Sentence a Day.” Check out the original photo for details. Photo by Kubilayaxun (Wikimedia Commons). CC BY-SA 4.0.

On December 27, 2025, China’s national legislature, the NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), approved revisions to the 2000 Law on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language (Standard Language Law or Law) [国家通用语言文字法]—a statute that defines China’s “national common language” and mandates its use across a variety of settings.

The Law’s first overhaul came after the Communist Party under Xi Jinping had elevated “forging a strong sense of community for the Chinese nation” [铸牢中华民族共同体意识] to “the main task for [its] ethnic work and all other initiatives in areas with large ethnic minority populations.” The task’s success hinges on cultivating a “deep” fivefold identification—with the motherland, the Chinese nation, the Chinese culture, the Party, and socialism with Chinese characteristics—among all ethnicities. And the key to such identification is a common language, Xi argues, calling for “comprehensive efforts to popularize the standard spoken and written Chinese language and the use of unified state-compiled textbooks, so as to facilitate shared psyche and future through communication.”

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NPC’s Budgetary Oversight Body Issues First Report on Review of Budgets and Fiscal Policy Measures

100 RMB banknotes
Photo by diy13 (stock.adobe.com)

On December 22, 2025, China’s national legislature, the NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), heard the first-ever report on the “recording and review of fiscal and budgetary matters” [财政预算事项备案审查] from its Budgetary Affairs Commission (BAC) [预算工作委员会], a ministerial-level professional body that supports legislative oversight over public finances, including budgets, state-owned assets, and government debt.

Regular readers may be more familiar with “recording and review” (R&R) [备案审查] as the NPCSC’s mechanism for overseeing the legislative rules issued by major central and local state institutions—or the “legislative R&R” process. But the legislature also receives numerous other filings, many of which concern budgetary matters and tax policy. Under the Budget Law [预算法], the State Council must annually file consolidated local budgets and final accounts with the NPCSC and submit specific rules governing the central government’s transfer payments to localities (see arts. 23, 29). Other statutory authorities impose filing obligations as well. For example, while all tax statutes authorize the State Council to adopt tax incentives, they also require it to file those incentives with the NPCSC.

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