City
Epaper

China clamps down on tech firms under market regulations policy during slowdown

By ANI | Updated: November 22, 2021 22:20 IST

China is clamping down on its tech firms as part of market regulations policy during a period of slow economic growth.

Open in App

China is clamping down on its tech firms as part of market regulations policy during a period of slow economic growth.

According to CNN, China's regulatory body State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) has fined tech firms for violating antitrust laws. SAMR sources mentioned that there were 43 separate violations, with some offences dating as far back as 2012. Each fine is of 500,000 yuan (USD 78,000).

"The cases announced this time are all transactions that should have been declared but not declared in the past," the SAMR added.

The curbs include collective market capitalisation of tech giants such as Tencent, a gaming and social media giant, and Alibaba, China's e-commerce powerhouse.

The highlight of crackdown includes an 18.2 billion yuan (USD 2.8 billion) record fine that technological giant Alibaba (BABA) was ordered to pay, reported CNN.

China's market regulator announced that companies including Alibaba, Baidu and JD.com were fined for failing to declare 43 deals that date as far back as 2012 to authorities after the anti-regulation which came into effect from 2008.

As per the SAMR, enterprises involved in the cases would be fined 500,000 yuan (USD 78,000) each, it said, the maximum under China's 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law.

China's effort to curb the technological giants are nothing new as from last year Beijing's regulatory bodies have come heavy on Alibaba and other Chinese firms over the past year.

It's observed that China's crackdown has curbed Beijing technological companies' entrepreneurial spirit that has built its formidable tech sector dating from the early 1990s.

Earlier, on August 8 this year as a part of its Centenary observation, the Communist Party issued a five-year blueprint to change China's tech industry and the changes will continue till 2022.

Earlier China's Anti-Trust or Anti Monopoly law was passed by the National People's Congress in 2007 and came into effect on 1 August 2008.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: chinabeijingCNNState AdministrationFacebook groupTwitter sportsInternational data corp.State for international tradeState sportsU.s. news
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalChina Blast: 17 Inured as Explosion Rocks Residential Area in Shanxi Province; Disturbing Video Goes Viral

BusinessGlobal Tech Firms Eye India for Manufacturing Amid US-China Tensions

OpinionsWill the Trump Card work Against China?

International20 Dead After Fire Blows Up A Nursing Home In Northern China (Photos)

InternationalUS Imposes 104% Tariff on China, Effective April 9

International Realted Stories

International"Monitoring situation closely," US Secy of State Marco Rubio on India missile strike in Pakistan

InternationalPakistan Claims It Shot Down 5 Indian Fighter Jets, Says Soldiers Taken Prisoner

International"India's actions focused and precise," says Indian consulate in New York after missile strike targets terror infra

InternationalJaish stronghold in Bhawalpur targeted in India missile strike, Pakistan confirms 24 impacts

InternationalWorld cannot afford military confrontation between India & Pakistan: Guterres