Chinese Legislature Seeks Public Comment on 10 Bills: Community Governance, Social Welfare, Public Health Emergency, Food Safety, Civil Aviation & More

China’s national legislature, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPCSC), is soliciting public comment on the following ten bills through July 26, 2025.

Draft NameChinese TextExplanatory Document
Public Health Emergency Response Law (2nd Draft)
突发公共卫生事件应对法草案二次审议稿
PDFPDF
Maritime Law (2nd Draft Revision)
海商法修订草案二次审议稿
PDFPDF
Law on Publicity and Education on the Rule of Law (2nd Draft)
法治宣传教育法草案二次审议稿
PDFPDF
Fisheries Law (2nd Draft Revision)
渔业法修订草案二次审议稿
PDFPDF
Civil Aviation Law (2nd Draft Revision)
民用航空法修订草案二次审议稿
PDFPDF
Villagers’ Committees Organic Law (Draft Amendment)
村民委员会组织法修正草案
PDF 🆚PDF
Urban Residents’ Committees Organic Law (Draft Revision)
城市居民委员会组织法修订草案
PDF 🆚PDF
Social Assistance Law (Draft)
社会救助法草案
PDFPDF
Healthcare Security Law (Draft)
医疗保障法草案
PDFPDF
Food Safety Law (Draft Amendment)
食品安全法修正草案
PDF 🆚PDF

English translations will be provided if available. All explanatory documents are in Chinese and compiled in a single PDF; the links above will take you to the corresponding pages in the PDF only if you use a desktop browser—this does not work on a phone or a tablet.

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NPCSC Session Watch: Public-Order Offenses, Unfair Competition, Community Governance, Social Welfare, Food Safety & Law Propaganda

UPDATE (June 27, 2025): On June 27, the NPCSC approved revisions to the Public Security Administration Punishments Law (effective Jan. 1, 2026) and to the Anti–Unfair Competition Law (effective Oct. 15, 2025). It also removed Miao Hua as a member of the PRC Central Military Commission and ratified the Convention on the Establishment of the International Organization for Mediation, among the other actions taken.

Image by bakhtiarzein (stock.adobe.com)

China’s top legislature, the 14th NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), will convene for its sixteenth session from June 24 to 27, the Council of Chairpersons decided on Monday, June 16. According to the Council’s proposed agenda, the session will consider twelve legislative bills, hear three oversight reports, and ratify the Convention on the Establishment of the International Organization for Mediation—which China signed on May 30 as a founding member. As usual, we preview the session’s legislative agenda in detail below.

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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.

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NPCSC Session Watch: Environmental Code, Private Sector Promotion, Arbitration, Enforcement of Prison Sentences & National Development Planning

UPDATE (Apr. 30, 2025): On April 30, the NPCSC approved the Private Economy Promotion Law (effective May 20, 2025); revised the Law on the Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases (effective Sept. 1, 2025); and adopted a decision authorizing the State Council to temporarily modify a provision of the Seed Law in the Xinjiang Pilot Free Trade Zone (effective May 1, 2025).

Tourists riding bamboo rafts on the Li River in Yangshuo, Guangxi. Photo by Changhao Wei. All rights reserved.

China’s top legislature, the 14th NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), will convene for its fifteenth session from April 27 to 30, the Council of Chairpersons decided on Friday, April 18. According to the Council’s proposed agenda, the session will consider eight legislative bills, which we preview below. The Council also approved the NPCSC’s 2025 work priorities as well as 2025 plans for legislative, oversight, delegates-related, and foreign-affairs work. We expect all but the foreign-affairs work plan to be released after the upcoming session, likely in early May.

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NPC 2025: Agenda and Daily Schedule

China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) has released its 2025 session’s agenda and daily schedule of meetings, as well as a preliminary schedule of press events during the session. This year’s session will open on the morning of March 5 and close on the afternoon of March 11, lasting seven full days. As the NPC spokesperson announced last year, the Premier will not hold a press conference after this session (or during the remainder of this NPC’s term “absent special circumstances”).

All times below are in China Standard Time (UTC +8:00). For a primer on the NPC and its annual sessions, check out this FAQ.

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Chinese Legislature Seeks Public Comment on Draft Revision to Civil Aviation Law

China’s national legislature, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPCSC), is soliciting public comment on a draft revision to the Civil Aviation Law [民用航空法] through March 26, 2025. The draft is available in PDF here and an explanatory document here. An English translation will be provided if and when available.

The NPCSC also reviewed the second draft of the Private Economy Promotion Law [民营经济促进法] at this week’s session, but did not release it for public comment today. The legislature may be revising that draft based on lawmakers’ feedback this week and could release an updated version for public comment later. Or it may have decided to forego another round of public consultation in hopes of passing the law quickly. We will publish a separate post should a new draft become available.

To submit comment online, please refer to this guide. Comments can also be mailed to the NPCSC Legislative Affairs Commission [全国人大常委会法制工作委员会] at the following address:

北京市西城区前门西大街1号 邮编: 100805
1 West Qianmen Avenue, Xicheng District, Beijing 100805

Please clearly write “民用航空法修订草案征求意见” on the envelope.

Year in Review: The NPC and the Observer in 2024

As we bid farewell to 2024, we reflect on the work of the National People’s Congress and of this publication over the past year.

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NPCSC Session Watch: VAT, Anti-Corruption, Private Sector Promotion, Law Propaganda & Unfair Competition

UPDATE (Dec. 26, 2024): On December 25, the NPCSC approved the Value-Added Tax Law (effective Jan. 1, 2026); amended the Supervision Law (effective June 1, 2025); and revised the Science and Technology Popularization Law (effective immediately).

Poster has the text "abiding by laws and popularizing laws is everyone's responsibility."
“Law popularization” propaganda poster released by the justice bureau of Qingyuan, Guangdong in 2021.

China’s top legislature, the 14th NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), will convene for its thirteenth session from December 21 to 25, the Council of Chairpersons decided on Friday, December 13. The Council proposed an agenda with ten legislative bills and several reports that might be of interest, which we preview below. It also approved the NPCSC’s 2025 work priorities as well as 2025 plans for legislative, oversight, delegates-related, and foreign affairs work; these documents will be finalized next April, and at least the first four will be publicly released thereafter.

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Commentary & Translation: China’s Plan to Raise Statutory Retirement Ages

Editor’s Note: In April 2025, we published in the Made in China Journal a longer commentary on the Decision that digs deeper into the history of retirement-age legislation and demographic changes in China, the national legislature’s post–Cultural Revolution lawmaking reforms, as well as its procedural failings in adopting the Decision.

On Friday, September 13, China’s national legislature, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPCSC) approved the Decision on Gradually Raising the Statutory Retirement Ages (Decision) [关于实施渐进式延迟法定退休年龄的决定]. Upon taking effect next year, the Decision will finally implement a reform that has been on the Chinese government’s agenda since at least 2013.

The Decision has three visually distinct components. It begins with a short main text with five articles covering only the essentials of the reform. What follows is a set of measures, attributed to the State Council, that describe the specific steps to implement the reform. The Decision ends with four charts (technically, annexes to the State Council’s measures) that allow citizens to easily look up their new retirement ages and see how much longer they may need to contribute to the pension fund to qualify for pension payments. As a legislative official made clear, all three are integral parts of the Decision and thus have statutory force.

News outlets worldwide have extensively covered the demographic challenges driving the reform, the initial public reaction to the plan, and its details. We won’t belabor the same points here. Nor will we delve into the Decision’s substance, a task we leave to subject matter experts.

Instead, we will provide a translation of the Decision (sans the charts) and discuss three issues related to the Decision: the NPCSC’s involvement in this major policy decision; the swift and secretive way in which the Decision was adopted; and the Decision’s unusual makeup—i.e., its inclusion of the State Council’s measures.

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NPCSC Session Watch: Anti-Corruption, Defense Education, Public Health Emergency, Government Debt, National Parks & State Honors

UPDATE (Sept. 13, 2024): On Friday, September 13, the NPCSC revised the National Defense Education Law (effective Sept. 21, 2024) and amended the Statistics Law (effective immediately), while releasing six other bills for public comment through October 12. The NPCSC also adopted a decision conferring state honors on various individuals to mark the PRC’s 70th anniversary and a decision on gradually raising the statutory retirement ages (effective Jan. 1, 2025).

UPDATE (Sept. 10, 2024): According to the official readout of the NPCSC’s meeting on September 10, it is also considering a draft decision, submitted by the State Council, to “gradually raise the statutory retirement ages.” The readout has not offered any other information about the bill, which we expect to pass on Friday.

Aerial view of the former Hoh Xil Nature Reserve, now part of the Three-River-Source National Park in Qinghai. Photo by Michael Wong/Flickr, CC BY-NC 2.0.

China’s top legislature, the 14th NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC), will convene for its eleventh session from September 10 to 13, the Council of Chairpersons decided on Tuesday, August 27. The session will consider eight legislative bills, according to the Council’s proposed agenda. The session will also adopt a decision to confer state honors on a slate of individuals nominated by the Communist Party to mark the 75th anniversary of the People’s Republic on October 1. The legislature likely has delayed its typical August session to mid-September to announce the conferral decision closer to the National Day holiday. (Five years ago, it held a special session on September 17 for that very purpose.) Lastly, the session will hear a few reports that might be of interest. We preview these agenda items below.

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