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Social Credit System

The Social Credit System (Chinese: 社会信用体系; pinyin: shèhuì xìnyòng tǐxì) is a national credit rating and blacklist being developed by the government of China.[1] The social credit initiative calls for the establishment of a record system so that businesses, individuals and government institutions can be tracked and evaluated for trustworthiness.[2][3] There are multiple forms of the social credit system being experimented with,[4][5] while the national regulatory method is based on whitelisting (termed redlisting in China) and blacklisting.[6][7][8]

Social Credit System
Simplified Chinese社会信用体系
Traditional Chinese社會信用體系
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinshèhuì xìnyòng tǐxì

The origin of the system can be traced back to the 1980s when the Chinese government attempted to develop a personal banking and financial credit rating system, especially for rural individuals and small businesses who lacked documented records.[9] The program first emerged in the early 2000s, inspired by the credit scoring systems in other countries.[1] The program initiated regional trials in 2009, before launching a national pilot with eight credit scoring firms in 2014.[10][7]

The Social Credit System is an extension to the existing legal and financial credit rating system in China.[11] Managed by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the People's Bank of China (PBOC) and the Supreme People's Court (SPC),[12] the system was intended to standardize the credit rating function and perform financial and social assessment for businesses, government institutions, individuals and non-government organizations.[13][14][15] The Chinese government's stated aim is to enhance trust in society with the system and regulate businesses in areas such as food safety, intellectual property, and financial fraud.[11][9][16]

China's Social Credit System has been implicated in a number of controversies.[17][18] There is no single social credit system or score. Social credit remains a fragmented set of policies and systems which impact businesses more than individuals, including financial credit reporting, blacklists for judgment debtors based on specific court orders, sectoral blacklists and redlists addressing non-compliant and compliant companies and their owners, no-fly and no-ride lists based on specific instances of train or plane passenger misconduct, and voluntary local programs which can provide rewards based on individual scores but no penalties.

History edit

Background edit

The origin of the Social Credit System can be traced back to the early 1990s as part of attempts to develop personal banking and financial credit rating systems in China, and was inspired by Western commercial credit systems like FICO, Equifax, and TransUnion.[19] The credit system aims to facilitate financial assessment[19] in rural areas, where individuals and small business entities often lacked financial documents.

In 1999, businesswoman Huang Wenyun wrote a report following her negative experiences with domestic business trustworthiness and her research into credit management in the United States business environment.[20]: 17–18  At the time, credit management and rating were largely unfamiliar concepts within the Chinese economy.[20]: 17  Huang sent her report to Premier Zhu Rongji, who approved it and in August 1999 ordered the People's Bank of China to take immediate action.[20]: 18  In September 1999, the Institute of Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences began a research project on establishing a national credit management system.[20]: 18  Huang contributed more than RMB 300,000 to fund the research initiative and sponsored fieldwork in the United States and Europe.[20]: 18  In the United States, the research group studied and prepared translations of 17 American credit reporting laws, including the Fair Credit Reporting Act.[20]: 18 

In January 2000, the research group from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences compiled their research into a text titled National Credit Management System.[20]: 18  Among these academics was Lin Junyue, who became an important intellectual figure in the development of social credit.[20]: 18  Premier Zhu approved the text and instructed government figures from ten ministries and commissions to begin studying the creation of a social credit management system.[20]: 18  In late January 2000, the State Council released an essay by Zhu in which Zhu stated that China must "vigorously rectify social credit."[20]: 18  In March 2000, Zhu delivered the government's work report to the National People's Congress, in which Zhu talked about the need to rectify social credit in the context of supervision of financial institutions, fraud, tax evasion, and debt repayments.[20]: 18 

2002 to 2014 edit

In 2002, the construction of a social credit system was formally announced during the 16th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.[20]: 71  The central government had not developed a specific vision for what a finished system might look like.[20]: 71  Local governments were to develop pilot initiatives which could then guide the larger policy approach.[20]: 71 

In 2003, the State Council stated that the basic framework and operational mechanisms for a social credit should be established within five years.[20]: 72  Most of the goals in this period were missed, although the financial aspects of social credit developed much further than non-financial aspects.[20]: 72–75 

Among the financial aspects of social credit which developed quickly was credit reporting.[20]: 74  In March 2006, the People's Bank of China established the Credit Reference Center, which has information regarding financial credit worthiness and has established basic financial records for 990 million Chinese citizens as of 2019.[20]: 47  Its records relate only to finance and does not have any blacklist mechanism.[20]: 47 

In 2007, the Inter-Ministerial Joint Conference on the Establishment of the SCS was established, replacing the leading small group which had previously been the top policy organ for social credit issues.[20]: 76  The initial blueprints of the Social Credit System were drafted in 2007 by government bodies.[9] The social credit system also attempts to solve the moral vacuum problem, insufficient market supervision and income inequality generated by the rapid economic and social changes since Chinese economic reform in 1978.[9] As a result of these problems, trust issues emerged in Chinese society such as food safety scandals, labor law violations, intellectual property thefts and corruption.[9] Among the purposes of social credit is promotion and moral education regarding personal integrity and honesty.[21]: 104  The policy of the social credit system traces its origin from both policing and work management practices.[9]

The government of modern China has maintained systems of paper records on individuals and households such as the dàng'àn (档案) and hùkǒu (户口) which officials might refer to, but these systems do not provide the same degree and rapidity of feedback and consequences for Chinese citizens as the integrated electronic system because of the much greater difficulty of aggregating paper records for rapid, robust analysis.[5]

The Social Credit System also originated from grid-style social management, a policing strategy first implemented in select locations from 2001 and 2002 (during the administration of Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin) in specific locations across mainland China. In 2002, the Jiang administration proposed a social credit system as part of the promotion of a "unified, open, competitive, and orderly modern market system."[19] In its first phase, grid-style policing was a system for more effective communication between public security bureaus. Within a few years, the grid system was adapted for use in distributing social services. Grid management provided the authorities not only with greater situational awareness on the group level, but also enhanced the tracking and monitoring of individuals.[9][22] In 2018, sociologist Zhang Lifan explained that Chinese society today is still deficient in trust. People often expect to be cheated or to get in trouble even if they are innocent. He believes that it is due to the Cultural Revolution, where friends and family members were deliberately pitted against each other and millions of Chinese were killed. The stated purpose of the social credit system is to help Chinese people trust each other again.[22]

One focus of social credit is to build judicial credibility through more effective enforcement of court orders.[20]: 53  In 2013, the Supreme People's Court (SPC) of China started a blacklist of debtors with roughly 32,000 names. The list has since been described as a first step towards a national Social Credit System by state-owned media.[23][24] The SPC's blacklist is composed of Chinese citizens and companies that refuse to comply with court orders (typically court orders to pay a fine or to repay a loan) despite having the ability to do so.[20]: 53  It is hosted online at the Supreme People's Court judgment defaulter blacklist portal, and the information is shared with Credit China and the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System.[20]: 60  The SPC also began working with private companies. For example, Sesame Credit began deducting credit points from people who defaulted on court fines.[23]

Although there was institutional enthusiasm for a social credit system during the 2004 to 2014 period, implementation was adversely impacted by planning difficulties stemming from the relationship between credit reporting initiatives (which were defined narrowly) and regulatory objectives (which were more vaguely defined).[20]: 10  A lack of central coordination resulted in institutional bottlenecks.[20]: 10 

2014 to 2020 edit

The State Council sought to accelerate the development of social credit and, in 2014, issued the Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System (2014-2020).[20]: 78  The Planning Outline was a major step in China's approach to developing a social credit system; before the 2014 Planning Outline, there had been only one high-level policy document (issued in 2007).[20]: 79  Since the Planning Outline, the State Council has issued new guidance annually.[20]: 79 

The Planning Outline focused primarily on economic activity in commerce, government affairs, social integrity, and judicial credibility.[20]: 79  It set broad goals intended to be reached by 2020: (1) a reward and punishment mechanism should be fully effective, (2) a basic credit investigation that covers the whole of society should be established, (3) credit oversight mechanisms should be established, (4) credit service markets should be performing well, and (5) fundamental social credit laws, regulations, and standards should be established.[20]: 79 

In 2015, the People's Bank of China licensed eight companies to begin a trial of social credit systems.[7][25] Among these eight firms is Sesame Credit (owned by Alibaba Group and operated by Ant Financial), Tencent, and China's biggest ride-sharing and online-dating services, Didi Chuxing and Baihe.com, respectively.[16][7] In general, multiple firms collaborated with the government to develop the software and algorithms used to calculate credit.[16][26] Commercial pilot programs developed by private Chinese conglomerates that have the authorization from the state to test out social credit experiments. The pilots are more widespread than their local government counterparts but function on a voluntary basis: citizens can decide to opt-out of these systems at any time on request. Users with good scores are offered advantages such as easier access to credit loans, discounts for car and bike sharing services, fast-tracked visa applications, free health check-ups and preferential treatment at hospitals.[27]

In 2016, the State Council encouraged market entities to provide preferential treatment to those with outstanding financial credit records and differentiated services to those with seriously untrustworthy records.[20]: 54 

The Chinese central government originally considered having the Social Credit System be run by a private firm, but by 2017, it acknowledged the need for third-party administration. However, no licenses to private companies were granted.[7] By mid-2017, the Chinese government had decided that none of the pilot programs would receive authorization to be official credit reporting systems. The reasons include conflict of interest, the remaining control of the government, as well as the lack of cooperation in data sharing among the firms that participate in the development.[5] However, the Social Credit System's operation by a seemingly external association, such as a formal collaboration between private firms, has not been ruled out yet.[7] In November 2017, Sesame Credit denied that Sesame Credit data was shared with the Chinese government.[28] In 2017, the People's Bank of China issued a jointly owned license to Baihang Credit valid for three years.[29] Baihang Credit is co-owned by the National Internet Finance Association (36%) and the eight other companies (8% each), allowing the state to maintain control and oversee the creation of new commercial pilot programs.[30] As of mid-2018, only pilot schemes had been tested without any official implementation.[31][32][33][34][35][36][excessive citations]

Private companies have also signed contracts with provincial governments to set up the basic infrastructure for the Social Credit System at the provincial level.[37] As of March 2017, 137 commercial credit reporting companies were active on the Chinese market.[14] As part of the development of the Social Credit System, the Chinese government has been monitoring the progress of third-party Chinese credit rating systems.[38] Ultimately, Chinese government dropped the support for privately developed credit rating system, and these pilot projects remained as corporate loyalty programs.[15]

In December 2017 the National Development and Reform Commission and People's Bank of China selected "model cities" that demonstrated the steps needed to make a functional and efficient implementation of the Social Credit System. Among them are Hangzhou, Nanjing, Xiamen, Chengdu, Suzhou, Suqian, Huizhou, Wenzhou, Weihai, Weifang, Yiwu and Rongcheng.[39][40] These pilots were deemed successful in their handling of "blacklists and 'redlists'", their creation of "credit sharing platforms" and their "data sharing efforts with the other cities".

By 2018, some restrictions had been placed on citizens which state-owned media described as the first step toward creating a nationwide social credit system.[31][32][33][34][35][36][excessive citations]

The local government Social Credit System experiments are focused more on the construction of transparent rule-based systems, in contrast with the rating systems used in the commercial pilots. Citizens often begin with an initial score, to which points are added or deducted depending on their actions. The specific number of points for each action are often listed in publicly available catalogs. Cities also experimented with a multi-level system, in which districts decide on scorekeepers who are responsible for reporting scores to higher-ups. Some experiments also allowed citizens to appeal the scores they were attributed.[41]

In July 2019, an NDRC spokesperson stated that at a press conference that "personal credit scores can be combined with incentives for trustworthiness, but cannot be used for punishments".[20]: 171  The Hong Kong Government stated in July 2019 that claims that the social credit system will be rolled out in Hong Kong are "totally unfounded" and stated that the system will not be implemented there.[42]

In 2019, high-level NDRC officials stated that over 10% of people blacklisted for their commission of tax fraud had repaid their taxes, that the bad credit rate had decreased by 22.7%, and that the proportion of companies blacklisted had decreased.[20]: 124  In the view of these officials, these were "remarkable results."[20]: 124 

2020 to present edit

In 2020, the Supreme People's Court announced that a nationwide total of 7.51 million blacklisted judgment defaulters had fulfilled their legal obligations and been removed from the judgment defaulter blacklist, accounting for half of the blacklisted judgment defaulters as of that date.[20]: 124 

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, various aspects of social credit were modified.[20]: 134–137  On February 1, 2020, the People's Bank of China announced it would temporarily suspend the inclusion of mortgage and credit card payments in the credit record of people impacted by the pandemic.[20]: 134  Private financial credit scoring companies, including Sesame Credit, suspended financial credit ratings.[20]: 134  Various cities established mechanisms to incentivize companies to provide pandemic relief, with measures including redlisting for those donating funds and supplies with benefits like simplified administrative procedures, increased policy support, or increased financial support.[20]: 135  On the enforcement side of social credit, provinces and cities promulgated regulations emphasizing heavy penalties for price hikes, violence against doctors, counterfeit medical supplies, refusal to comply with pandemic prevention measures, and wildlife trade violations.[20]: 134 

In 2020, the rights protection metrics in the NDRC's City Credit Status Monitoring and Early Warning Indicators emphasized that cities must establish transparent credit repair procedures handled within an appropriate timeframe.[20]: 138  It also emphasized that cities should prevent the over generalization of the concept of credit, stating that individual behavior such as petitioning the government, unpaid property fees, running red lights (among other listed examples) must not be included in a person's credit record.[20]: 138 

The State Council issued its Guiding Opinions on Further Improving Systems for Restraining the Untrustworthy and Building Mechanisms for Building Credit Worthiness that have Long-term Effect in November 2020.[20]: 139  The central message of the Guiding Opinions was that new blacklists should not be created on an ad hoc basis and that social credit should not be applied in policy areas without sufficient consensus.[20]: 139  It stated that credit repair processes must be improved, that blacklists must only be used in instances of severe harm, and that information security and privacy should be prioritized.[20]: 139 

In November 2021, the United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) adopted a Recommendation on the Ethics of AI.[20]: 176  Among its recommendations is that "AI systems should not be used for social scoring or mass surveillance purposes."[20]: 176  China is a signatory of the document.[20]: 176 

Following their submission for public comment, China in December 2021 issued the National List of Basic Penalty Measures for Untrustworthiness and the National Directory of Public Credit Information.[20]: 140  The National Directory establishes limitations on what types of credit information can be collected or used as a basis for social credit penalties or rewards.[20]: 140  It describes three categories of data: (1) information that is appropriate for consideration, (2) information on violations that can be considered only when the circumstances of the violation are severe, and (3) information that can never be included as part of social credit.[20]: 140–141  Appropriate information for consideration includes information on the execution of judicial judgments, administrative violations, among other material, and positive recognition for trustworthy behavior.[20]: 140  Information appropriate only when the circumstances of the violation are severe include small payment arrears or public transportation fare evasion.[20]: 141  The National Directory bans the consideration of private information like religious preferences or government petitioning activity.[20]: 141 

The December 2021 National List's purpose is to further standardize penalty measures.[20]: 143  It specifies that administrative bodies cannot extent penalties beyond those provided in national level law and regulation.[20]: 143  In a 2022 directive, the State Council stated that it will "actively explore innovative ways to use the credit concept and methods to solve difficulties, bottlenecks, and painful points that restrict the country's economic and social activities."[19] On 14 November 2022, the NDRC issued a draft Law on the Establishment of the Social Credit System.[20]: 188  According to academic Vincent Brussee, the draft "was deeply unsatisfactory to SCS observers worldwide. It did not stipulate anything not already regulated in one of the many recent documents on the system. The draft just copy-pasted bits form those."[20]: 188 

As of 2022, over 62 different Social Credit System pilot programs were implemented by local governments.[19] The pilot programs began following the release of the 2014 "Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System" by Chinese authorities. The government oversees the creation and development of these governmental pilots by requesting they each publish a regular "interdepartmental agreement on joint enforcement of rewards and punishments for 'trustworthy' and 'untrustworthy' conduct."[43]

Though some reports stated social credit would be powered by artificial intelligence (AI), as of 2023 penalty decisions were made by humans, not AI, and digitization remained limited.[20]: 14  Credit systems for local government remained undeveloped and resemble incentivized loyalty programs like those run by airlines.[20]: 14  Participation is fully voluntary and there are no enticement beyond losing access to minor rewards. For fear of overreach and pushback, Chinese central government banned punishments for low scores and minor offences.[15] During the city trials, pilot programs only saw limited participation.[19] Many people living in pilot program cities are unaware of the programs.[19] In Xiamen, 210,059 users activated their social credit account, roughly 5 percent of Xiamen population; 60,000 or 1.5 percent of population in Wuhu participated the system; Hangzhou has 1,872,316 (15 percent) participants and fewer regularly use the system. Scores are not shared between cities as the scoring criteria and mechanisms are different.[15]

By 2023, most private social credit initiatives had been shut down by the People's Bank of China and regulations had cracked down on most local scoring pilot programs.[20]: 12 

Organization edit

Social credit in China is a broad policy category seeking to enforce legal obligations including laws, regulations, and contracts.[20]: 3  Social credit does not itself bring new restrictions; it focuses on increasing implementation of existing restrictions.[21]: 105  There are multiple social credit systems in China, some of which are designed and operated by the state, while others are operated by private companies.[19] China's governmental approaches to social credit are described by various sets of documents issued by different institutions.[21]: 103  There is no integrated system,[20]: 3  nor a comprehensive document setting out a unified approach.[21]: 103  Generally, the different approaches to social credit are united by the theme of increasing digitization, data collection, and data centralization.[21]: 103 

There is no unified, numerical credit score for businesses or individuals, rather national and local platforms use different evaluation or rating systems.[15][44] Due to the differences in various pilot programs and a fragment system structure, information regarding the scoring mechanism is often conflicting.[45][15] Inspired by FICO,[46][47] a numerical social credit score calculated by individual behavior and activities was given to citizens in certain pilot programs developed by financial firms or localized initiatives.[15][48] However, these practices were not widespread applications and eventually, the numerical score mechanism was limited to private credit rating and loyalty programs.[4][49] Private involvements were ultimately abandoned by the government.[50]

The system includes sanctions for the offenders; unlike in the past where the offenders were punished by one supervising agency or court, they now face sanctions from multiple agencies, greatly increasing their effect. Though the sanctions are severe, they affect a small part of companies and individuals. By publicizing these punishments and blacklists through state-media and through other agencies, the system is aimed to create a deterrence effect.[15]

Social credit is an example of China's "top-level design" (顶层设计) approach. It is coordinated by the Central Comprehensively Deepening Reforms Commission.[14] Social credit when referred by the Chinese government, generally covers two different concepts. The first is "traditional financial creditworthiness" where it documents the financial history of individuals and companies and score them on how well they are able to pay off future loans. The second concept is “social creditworthiness” where the government is stating that there needs to be higher "trust in society". And to build such trust, the government had proposed to combat corruption, scammers, tax evasion, counterfeiting of goods, false advertising, pollution and other problematic issues, and to create the mechanisms to keep individuals and companies accountable for such transgressions.[51]

Conceptualization edit

Scholars have conceptualized four different types of systems. These four systems are not interconnected, but relatively independent from each other with their own jurisdictions, rules and logic.[5][4]

Business trustworthiness system (Chinese: 商务诚信体系)
Blacklist system for discredited business organizations. This system is regulated by People's Bank of China financial credit-rating system and commercial credit-rating system.[52]
Government trustworthiness system (Chinese: 政务诚信体系)
Evaluation system targeting civil servants and government institutions.[52]
Social trustworthiness system (Chinese: 社会诚信体系)
Blacklist system for discredited individuals. Social trustworthiness system most closely relates to China's mass surveillance systems.[52]
Judiciary public trust system (Chinese: 司法公信体系)
Blacklist system for judgment defaulters. This system is regulated by Supreme People's Court.[52][53]

As of 2023, the government has only created a system that is primarily focused on assessing businesses rather than on individuals, and consists of a database that collects the data on corporate regulation compliance from a number of government agencies. Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at the Beijing-based consultancy firm Trivium China, had described the system in a report for the US government’s US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, as being “roughly equivalent to the IRS, FBI, EPA, USDA, FDA, HHS, HUD, Department of Energy, Department of Education, and every courthouse, police station, and major utility company in the US sharing regulatory records across a single platform”.[6] The database can be openly accessed by any Chinese citizen on the newly created website called "Credit China". Its database also includes random information like a list of approved robot building companies, hospitals that have committed insurance fraud, universities that are deemed legitimate and a list of individuals who have defaulted on a court judgement.[51]

Implementation edit

Social credit does not itself bring new restrictions; it focuses on increasing implementation of existing restrictions.[21]: 105  Although the Chinese government announced in 2014 that it would implement a nationwide social credit system by 2020, as of 2023 no full-fledged system exists.[21]: 123–124 

Implementation of social credit is primarily focused on marketplace behavior.[20]: 14  As of 2023, about 1% of companies and 0.3% of individuals receive social credit related penalties per year.[20]: 14 

Financial credit reporting edit

National financial credit reporting for businesses and individuals is provided by the People's Bank of China, which does not assign any numerical scoring.[49]

Redlists edit

Redlisting practices seek to incentivize exemplary personal behavior or business compliance.[20]: 118  Redlist practices vary significantly and there are no top-level regulations or guidance addressing redlists in detail.[20]: 118–119  The most common benefit to redlisted companies include reduced administrative burdens or simplified procedures.[20]: 118–119  Part of the government logic for redlisting companies is that it makes it facilitates regulators' ability to focus on companies with a worse compliance record.[20]: 119  Redlisted individuals may receive benefits like parking and public transit discounts or discount tourist site tickets.[20]: 119 

Blacklists edit

Blacklisting is based on specific instances of misconduct, not any numerical score.[21]: 103  The Central Government operates a number of national and regional blacklists based on various types of violations. The court system is available for businesses, organizations and individuals to appeal their violations. As of 2019, it typically took 2–5 years to be removed from the blacklist, but early removal is also possible if the blacklisted person "fulfills legal obligations or remedies".[54][55]

Three main types of blacklists exist: (1) the judgment defaulter blacklist, (2) sectoral blacklists, and (3) no-fly/no-ride lists.[20]: 107  Before being added to a blacklist, a person or company must be informed of the decision and the legal basis for it.[20]: 115  Blacklists may be publicized, although as of at least 2023 there is no uniform method for doing so.[20]: 115  Some blacklist portals can be searched online while others are uploaded as PDFs or image files.[20]: 118  Blacklisted parties are sometimes displayed in public settings, including on the Internet, in newspapers, or television.[20]: 118 

Judgment defaulter blacklist edit

Before 2013, the process of obtaining court-ordered enforcement against judgment debtors was fragmented.[20]: 108  In 2013, the Supreme People's Court issued the Several Provisions on Announcement of the Judgment Defaulter Blacklist which became the foundational regulation for the judgment defaulter blacklist.[20]: 108  It stated that to be included on the list, a defaulter must be capable of complying with the court orders, but actively avoids doing so.[20]: 108  Based on the idea that judgment defaulters should repay their debts before purchasing luxuries, once added to the list, judgment defaulters are restricted from (1) travelling via plane, high speed train, or first class non-high speed train, (2) staying at star-rated hotels or golf courses, (3) purchasing real estate, (4) leasing "high-grade" office buildings, hotels, or apartments, (5) purchasing "non-business essential" vehicles, (6) holiday trips, (7) sending children to high fee private schools, (8) purchasing high-premium insurance products, and (9) "other non-life and non-work essential consumption behavior."[20]: 108–109 

In 2019, a Hebei court released an app showing a "map of deadbeat debtors" within 500 meters and encouraged users to report individuals who they believed could repay their debts.[56] A spokesman of the court stated that "It's a part of our measures to enforce our rulings and create a socially credible environment."[57]

The Supreme People's Court's blacklist is one of its most important enforcement tools and its use has resulted in the recovery of tens of trillions of RMB for fines and delinquent repayments as of 2023.[20]: 53 

Sectoral blacklists edit

Many sectoral blacklists exist and are managed by a variety of regulatory and administrative bodies.[20]: 110  Primarily, the penalties for being included on these blacklists are discretionary restrictions in administrative processes and interactions with the government.[20]: 111  For example, regulators may exclude a company on a sectoral blacklist from participating in public procurement, revoke government funding or subsidies, cancel permits or revoke qualifications or certifications, or restrict the issuance of corporate bonds.[20]: 111  Penalties cannot be developed ad hoc and must instead be based in national level law and regulation.[20]: 111  Penalties from inclusion on sectoral blacklists may be imposed both on the violating company as well as legal representatives, senior company management, and the staff directly responsible for the violation that placed the company on the blacklist.[20]: 112  Multiple government bodies may impose restrictions as a result of a person or company's inclusion on a sectoral blacklist.[20]: 110–111  The availability of sectoral blacklist with the public also means that potential business partners may act accordingly and decline to deal with a blacklisted company.[20]: 111 

No-fly and no-ride lists edit

Inclusion on the no-ride list or no-fly list results from specific instances of misconduct on trains or planes.[20]: 113  Misconduct resulting in inclusion on the no-ride or no fly lists can include violation of safety regulations, harassing other passengers or transportation workers, smoking, scalping tickets, or using counterfeit tickets.[20]: 113  Inclusion on the list prohibits a person from buying new tickets for a designated time period, usually six to twelve months.[20]: 113  This is the only penalty under the no-ride or no-fly list, and inclusion on these blacklists has no impact in other areas of life or business.[20]: 113 

By May 2018, several million flight and high-speed train trips had been denied to people who had been blacklisted.[32] As of June 2019, according to the National Development and Reform Commission of China, 26.82 million air tickets as well as 5.96 million high-speed rail tickets had been denied to people who were deemed "untrustworthy" (失信) (on a blacklist) and 4.37 million "dishonest" people had chosen to fulfill their duties required by the law.[58][59] In July 2019, additional 2.56 million flight tickets as well as 90 thousand high-speed train tickets were denied to those on the blacklist.[60]

The no-fly list is administered by Civil Aviation Administration of China.[20]: 113  The no-ride list is administered by the National Railway Administration.[20]: 113 

Procedures for removal from blacklists edit

After a blacklist decision becomes effective, the blacklisted party can file for credit repair.[20]: 115  Through the credit repair process, a violator corrects the impact of the underlying violation and commits to abide by laws and regulations in the future.[20]: 115  Companies undergoing credit repair typically must supply evidence that they have corrected their violations.[20]: 123  Companies may also have to agree to a credit pledge in which they commit to upholding laws and regulations, commit to abiding by contracts, and agree to be subject to more severe penalties for any future violations.[20]: 123  If authorities approve of the request for credit repair, the violator is removed from the blacklist and penalties are ended.[20]: 115 

For companies edit

The Social Credit System is meant to provide an answer to the problem of lack of trust on the Chinese market. As of 2020, the corporate regulation function of the system appears to be more advanced than other parts of the system and the "Corporate Social Credit System" has been the primary focus of government attention.[11] As of 2020, over 73.3% of the enforcement action since 2014 is targeted toward companies, the largest part of all enforcements, while around 1-2% of all companies were sanctioned by the system annually.[15]

For businesses, the Social Credit System is meant to serve as a market regulation mechanism. The goal is to establish a self-enforcing regulatory regime fueled by big data in which businesses exercise "self-restraint" (企业自我约束). The basic idea is that with a functional credit system in place, companies will comply with government policies and regulations to avoid having their scores lowered by disgruntled employees, customers or clients.[14] For example, the central government can use social credit data to offer risk-assessed grants and loans to small and medium enterprises (SMEs), encouraging banks to offer greater loan access for SMEs.[11]

As currently envisioned, companies with good credit scores will enjoy benefits such as good credit conditions, lower tax rates, less custom checks,[11] and more investment opportunities. Companies with bad credit scores will potentially face unfavorable conditions for new loans, higher tax rates, investment restrictions and lower chances to participate in publicly funded projects.[14] Government plans also envision real-time monitoring of a business's activities. In that case, infractions on the part of a business could result in a lower score almost instantly. However, whether this will actually happen depends on the future implementation of the system as well as on the availability of technology needed for this kind of monitoring.[14]

To improve credit score, companies need to conform to the government rules, such as following the COVID-19 containment guidelines.[11]

For government institutions edit

Government institutions receive the second highest number of enforcement actions, accounting for 13.3% of the penalties as of 2020, while less than 0.1% of all government entities were sanctioned by the system annually.[15] The social credit system targets government agencies, assesses local governments' performance and focuses on financial problems such as local governments' debts and contract defaults.[15] The Central Government hopes the system can improve "government self-discipline."[11] Local governments are also encouraged and rewarded by the social credit system if they successfully implement and follow the orders from the central government.[56]

For individuals edit

As of 2020, individuals receive 10.3% of all enforcement actions, affecting around 0.15% to 0.3% of the national population annually.[15] The dealing of the social credit system with individuals focuses on the financial trustworthiness of individual citizens. The dealing of the system with individuals is primarily focused on debt repayment, though major violations of the law have also been sanctioned.[15] One major focus is that of the debt-dodger (laolai), a phrase which refers to those who can pay their debts but choose not to.[19] A laolai blacklist is maintained by the Supreme People's Court.[19]

In addition to dishonest and fraudulent financial behavior, there have been proposals in some cities to officially list several behaviors as negative factors of credit ratings, including playing loud music or eating in rapid transits,[61] violating traffic rules such as jaywalking and red-light violations,[62][63] making reservations at restaurants or hotels, but not showing up,[64] failing to correctly sort personal waste,[65][66][67] fraudulently using other people's public transportation ID cards,[68] etc.; on the other hand, including behavior listed as positive factors of credit ratings such as donating blood, donating to charity, volunteering for community services, praising government efforts on social media and so on.[69][70][71] However, due to the system mainly relying on digitized administrative documents, early efforts to integrate behavioral data into the system were mainly discarded.[15]

There are various punishments for debtors. Delinquent debtors are placed on blacklists maintained by Chinese courts and shared with the Ministry of Public Security, which controls the country's entry-exit checkpoints. Individuals with outstanding debts can be subject to exit bans and prevented from leaving the country as a way of encouraging or forcing the collection of debt. According to the Financial Times, as of 2017, some 6.7 million debtors had already been placed on blacklists and prevented from exiting the country as a result of the new policy.[72] Future rewards of having a high score might include easier access to loans and jobs and priority during bureaucratic paperwork. A person with poor social credit may be denied employment in places such as banks, state-owned enterprises, or as a business executive. The Chinese government encourages checking whether candidates names' appear on the blacklist when hiring.[73][needs update]

In certain test programs, public humiliation is used as a mechanism to deter sanctioned individuals.[55][74][75][76] Mugshots of blacklisted individuals are sometimes displayed on large LED screens on buildings or shown before the movie in movie theaters.[77] Certain personal information of the blacklisted people is deliberately made accessible to the public and is displayed online as well as at various public venues such as movie theaters and buses, while some cities have also banned children of "untrustworthy" residents from attending private schools and even universities.[78][79][80][81][needs update] People with high credit ratings may receive rewards such as less waiting time at hospitals and government agencies, discounts at hotels, greater likelihood of receiving employment offers, and so on.[68][69][70][82][needs update]

According to Sarah Cook of Freedom House in 2019, city-level pilot projects for the social credit system have included rewarding individuals for aiding authorities in enforcing restrictions of religious practices, including coercing practitioners of Falun Gong to renounce their beliefs and reporting on Uighurs who publicly pray, fast during Ramadan or perform other Islamic practices.[56][83] In a October 2022 study, professors from Princeton University, Freie Universität Berlin and Pennsylvania State University also found that “repressing protesters, petitioners, journalists, and political activists via the SCS is common among Chinese localities.”[84]

For social organizations edit

As of 2020, non-government organizations receive 3.3% of all enforcement actions. Although the enforcement remain a small group in numerical terms, but their inclusion has an important implication as it affects foreign NGOs operated within China.[15]

Examples of city trial policies edit

Most initiatives under the social credit system do not involve actual numerical scores; instead, documentation of specific offenses is recorded in one's credit profile, the exception being the trial programs launched by some cities and communities. The actual policy varies greatly from city to city, and participation is voluntary. Local credit profiles are not shared between cities.

Since the early 2010s, there have been pilot programs started in a number of cities to test out and help build the future social credit system. However, many of these pilot programs were publicly criticised in the state media and failed to proceed.[85] By 2019, the central authorities issued formal clarification that "scores" can not be used to punish citizens.[citation needed] As a result, many pilot programs were discontinued, while some pilot cities revised their programs. Examples were Wenzhou, which abandoned their initial program and, in 2019, revised it to be an "encouragement-only scheme". Another was Rongcheng, which changed their pilot program in 2021, so that it was strictly voluntary and can only issue rewards. According to a 2022 article from the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS), the only social credit system programs that continue to have "personal scores" of individuals are strictly for issuing positive incentives only.[85] Under some policies, higher scores can earn a participant cheaper public transportation, shorter security lines in subways, or tax reductions.[86]: 204 

Non-comprehensive examples of city trial policies
Stage Type Introduction Policy
City trials Social 2016 Starting 1 May 2016, Shanghai elderly residents may sue their children or other family members if the latter do not regularly visit the elderly and the courts in Shanghai may rule that the children or other family members must visit the elderly and, if rejected, the children or relevant family members will be blacklisted.[87][88]
City trials Social 2019 Beijing government officially announced that it will start to explore and test a "Personal Credit Score."[89]
City trials Social 2019 In Beijing, inappropriate behavior in rapid transit systems, including playing loud music or eating (except for infants and sick people), could result in a negative record in local credit profiles.[61][90]
City trials Social 2018 In selected intersections of Beijing and Shenzhen, personal information of traffic violators is publicly displayed on the screens at traffic crosses and red-light violations may be recorded in credit profiles in the future.[91][92][93][94]
City trials Social 2019
  • Starting 1 August 2019, Guangzhou residents who cheat in national, provincial or municipal examinations will receive a negative record in their credit profiles.[68][95]
  • Starting 1 August 2019, Guangzhou residents who fraudulently use other people's public-transportation identification cards or fake ID cards or occupy the seats of others, may receive a negative record in their credit profiles.[68][95]
City trials Social 2018–2019
  • Starting 1 November 2019, Shenzhen residents who are at least 14 years old who violate traffic rules such as jaywalking and crossing at a red light, once caught, will receive a negative record in their credit profiles. For residents under the age of 14 who violate traffic rules, their legal guardians will need to take educational courses or complete certain social services, otherwise the traffic violation will be recorded in their credit profiles.[62][96][97][98]
  • In Shenzhen, traffic violations of motor vehicle or moped drivers, such as inappropriate use of high beam and drunk driving, may be recorded in the credit profiles of the drivers; if the driver receives a traffic fine 5 times or more in a year or has 3 unresolved violations or more in a year, they will receive a negative record in their profile.[62][96][97][99]
City trials Social 2019 Starting 1 August 2019, individuals and organizations in Hangzhou who do not comply with the waste sorting rules of the city will receive a negative record in their credit profiles and will have to pay a corresponding amount of fine.[67][100]
City trials Social 2019 Starting 8 July 2019, moped drivers and pedestrians who make 5 or more traffic violations (including red-light violations) in a year will receive a negative record in their credit profiles in Nanjing. In some places, personal information of traffic violators is publicly displayed on the screens at traffic crosses.[63][101][102]
City trials Social 2016 Starting in 2016, Suzhou city launched "Osmanthus score". 25 types of residents' behavior will cost a drop in their credit scores, including cheating in online video games, making reservations at hotels or restaurants, but not showing up, failing to pay cellphone bills promptly, failing to pick up take-out foods ordered, etc.[64][70] On the other hand, making blood donations or doing volunteer work may boost one's credit score.[70]
City trials Social 2017
  • Jinan city launched penalty point system for dog regulation. Starting from 1 January 2017, dog owners lose three points for keeping their dogs off leash in public places, allowing their dogs to disturb other people, not cleaning up after their dogs, etc. Owners lose another three points on the second offense. They lose all 12 points for the third time and are banned from owning a dog for a period of 5 years; owners also lose all 12 points immediately if their dogs are found unregistered with the government or faulting annual review.[103][104][105] Dogs of owners with zero points are confiscated by the government until the owner takes free courses on relevant city rules and passes corresponding exams.[103][104][105]
  • Shanghai Police Department intended to establish a point system in 2019 for dog owner offense which is linked to the owners' overall credit profiles.[106][107]
City trials Business 2018 In November 2018, a detailed plan was produced for further implementation of the program for 2018–2020 in Beijing. The plans included blacklisting people from public transport and publicly disclosing individuals' and businesses' untrustworthiness ratings.[108][109]

Public opinions edit

Writing in 2023, academic Vincent Brussee observes that European misconceptions of social credit in China have become a source of amusement among Chinese Internet users.[20]: 3 

Approvals edit

In a 2018 study, 80% of respondents either strongly approved or approved of China's Social Credit System, while one percent disapproved.[19] The study was conducted by Professor Genia Kostka of Free University of Berlin and was based on a cross-regional Internet survey of 2,209 Chinese citizens of various backgrounds.[110][111] The study found "a surprisingly high degree of approval of SCSs across respondent groups" and that "more socially advantaged citizens (wealthier, better-educated and urban residents) show the strongest approval of SCSs, along with older people".[110] Kostka explained in the paper that "while one might expect such knowledgeable citizens to be most concerned about the privacy implications of SCS, they instead appear to embrace SCSs because they interpret it through frames of benefit-generation and promoting honest dealings in society and the economy instead of privacy-violation."[110]

In August 2019, assistant researcher Zhengjie Fan of China Institute of International Studies published an article, claiming that the current punishment policies such as the blacklist do not overstep the limits of law. He argued that since 2014, China's Social Credit System and the credit system of the market had grown to complement each other, forming a mutually beneficial interaction.[112] According to Doing Business 2019 by World Bank Group which ranks "190 countries on the ease of doing business within their borders", China rose from 78th place in previous year to 46th place and Fan claimed that the Social Credit System has played an important role.[112][113]

In a October 2022 study, professors from Princeton University, Freie Universität Berlin (Genia Kostka), and Pennsylvania State University discovered through a field survey of college students in China that “revealing the repressive potential of the SCS significantly reduces support for the system, whereas emphasizing its function in maintaining social order does not increase support.”[84] Additionally, the professors found that a nationwide survey of Chinese netizens showed higher support for the SCS among Chinese citizens who learned about it through state media.[84]

Criticism edit

Chinese academics have produced a substantial body of work analyzing social credit in China.[20]: 7  As of 2023, the large majority of Chinese scholarships accept the legitimacy of social credit as a whole, although there are also criticisms of different approaches or implementation efforts.[20]: 7–8  In several instances, academics' criticisms of social credit have been adopted and re-issued by state media outlets, including Xinhua and People's Daily.[20]: 8 

In October 2019, Professor Kui Shen of the Law School of Peking University published a paper in China Legal Science, suggesting that some of the then-current credit policies violated the "rule of law" or "Rechtsstaat": that they infringed the legal rights of residents and organizations, possibly violated the principle of respecting and protecting human rights, especially the right to reputation, the right to privacy as well as personal dignity and overstepped the boundary of reasonable punishment.[114] In May 2020, Chinese investigative media group Caixin reported that business social credit systems in China were insufficient in deterring problematic business activities and that the social credit system was easy to game in favour of businesses.[115]

China's Social Credit System has been implicated in a number of controversies. Western critics view social credit as an intrusive mechanism that infringes on privacy.[18] In October 2018, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence criticized the social credit system, describing it as "an Orwellian system premised on controlling virtually every facet of human life."[116] In January 2019, George Soros criticized the social credit system, saying it would give CCP leader Xi Jinping "total control over the people of China".[117][118]

From 2017 to 2018, researchers argued that the credit system would be part of the government's plan to automate their authoritarian rule over the Chinese population.[9][119][120] In June 2019, Samantha Hoffman of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute argued that "there are no genuine protections for the people and entities subject to the system... In China there is no such thing as the rule of law. Regulations that can be largely apolitical on the surface can be political when the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) decides to use them for political purposes."[121] In August 2018, Professor Genia Kostka of Free University of Berlin stated in her published paper that "if successful in [their] effort, the Communist Party will possess a powerful means of quelling dissent, one that is comparatively low-cost and which does not require the overt (and unpopular) use of coercion by the state."[27] In December 2017, Human Rights Watch described the proposed social credit system as "chilling" and filled with arbitrary abuses.[122]

Misconceptions edit

There has been a degree of misreporting and misconceptions in English-language mass media due to translation errors, sensationalism, conflicting information and lack of comprehensive analysis.[17][4][123][49][124] Examples of such popular misconceptions include a widespread misassumption that Chinese citizens are rewarded and punished based on a numerical score (social credit score) assigned by the system, that its decisions are taken by AI and that it constantly monitors Chinese citizens.[15][8][44][125][1][126]

  • In July 2019, Wired reported that there existed misconceptions regarding the Social Credit System of China. It argued that "Western concerns about what could happen with China's Social Credit System have in some ways outstripped discussions about what's already really occurring...The exaggerated portrayals may also help to downplay surveillance efforts in other parts of the world." The rise of misconception, according to Jeremy Daum of Yale University, is contributed by translation errors, the difference in word usage and so on.[123]
  • In May 2019, Logic published an article by Shazeda Ahmed, who argued that "[f]oreign media has distorted the social credit system into a technological dystopia far removed from what is actually happening in China." She pointed out that common misconceptions included the beliefs that surveillance data is connected with a centralized database; that human activities online and offline are assigned with actual values that can be deducted and that every citizen in China has a numerical score that is calculated by computer algorithm.[4]
  • In March and February 2019, MIT Technology Review stated that, "[i]n the West, the system is highly controversial and often portrayed as an AI-powered surveillance regime that violates human rights."[127] However, the magazine reported that "many scholars argue that social credit scores won't have the wide-scale controlling effect presumed...the system acts more as a tool of propaganda than a tool of enforcement" and that "[o]thers point out that it is simply an extension of Chinese culture's long tradition of promoting good moral behavior and that Chinese citizens have a completely different perspective on privacy and freedom."[128]
  • In November 2018, Foreign Policy listed some factors which contributed to the misconception of China's credit system. The potential factors included the scale and variety of the social credit system program and the difficulties of comprehensive reporting that comes with it.[49]
  • In May 2018, Rogier Creemers of Leiden University stated that despite the Chinese government's intentions of utilizing big data and artificial intelligence, the regulatory method of SCS remained relatively crude. His research concluded that it is "... perhaps more accurate to conceive of the SCS as an ecosystem of initiatives broadly sharing a similar underlying logic, than a fully unified and integrated machine for social control."[30]
  • In November 2018, Bing Song, director of the Berggruen Institute China Center, posted an opinion piece in The Washington Post, arguing that the Western media and institutions have misreported the details and mechanics of the Social Credit system. The article suggested that media have confused private score reporting mechanisms with the national system. He also noted that penalties are executed based on the Supreme Court laws and regulations, while private scoring companies and government agencies are not capable of enacting penalties. He argued the widespread media reports often ignored the fact that local governments can be targeted in the blacklists and the scoring systems and its effects were exaggerated by many media stories. He also argued that the cultural expectations of the government and its role in China are different than that of in other countries.[129]
  • In March 2021, The Diplomat remarked that the assumption by Western observers that the Social Credit System is an Orwellian surveillance system exaggerates the reality and purpose of the system in real life. Despite the claim, the social credit system is "an extension of bond issuance risk assessment credit ratings introduced in China in the 1980s" and primarily serves the function of a financial risk assessment tool.[11]
  • In October 2021, The Washington-based think tank The Jamestown Foundation explored the function of the Social Credit System and concluded that there were widespread misinterpretations regarding the function and mechanism of the SCS. The think tank found that misinformed perceptions of an algorithm-driven citizen-rating system are originated from early analyses that confused the regulation-enforcement mechanisms and the morality propaganda campaigns of the SCS initiative. Furthermore, many failed to distinguish between the government regulations and the private credit rating systems. Corporations hyperbolically promoted the scores' predictive abilities, which may have resonated with Western anxiety and concerns surrounding corporate data collection and government access to personal information.[50]
  • In 2022, academics Diana Fu and Rui Hou noted the persistence of Western misconceptions in their article Rating Citizens with China's Social Credit System, stating, "Western media articles initially compared the system to an episode of the British sci-fi series Black Mirror in which individuals' every day behavior, down to the minutiae, were tracked and rated by other people and a "big brother" government. Since then, scholars and journalists have sought to dispel this dystopian depiction of the social credit system, but the image continued to live on, particularly after the Trump administration started to use it as part of its anti-China policy in 2017 and 2018."[19]
  • In 2023, academic Filip Šebok wrote that perhaps the most common myth associated with social credit is that there is a single numerical score that records individuals' behavior.[21]: 104  No such score exists.[21]: 104 
  • Academic Vincent Brussee writes that as of 2023, "hundreds of headlines have discussed the system, but few have systematically broken down what the [social credit system] is and how it works. Some studies refer to the 'breathtaking' ambition of the system and the 'massive quantities of behavioural data' going into the system without substantiating these claims in any way. Others rely on assumptions of what the system will look like, erroneously speculating that everyone will receive a social credit score, that this score will be publicly available, and that a bad rating will have far-reaching consequences. It is like a game of Chinese Whispers gone wrong."[20]: 40 

In popular culture edit

In 2021, the social credit system was popularized as an Internet meme on various social media platforms. VICE reported that the memes' popularity reflects the "widespread discontent toward the Chinese government over its restrictions of people's freedoms", however, the article noted the trend continued the existing misapprehension and misinformation regarding the SCS mechanism, such as the idea that people in China are rewarded/punished based on a numerical "social credit score".[125] The joke is often posed as a positive or negative action towards the Chinese government which affects the poster's "social credit score" positively or negatively.[130]: 40 

According to The Spectator, the Western narrative of the "social credit score" received widespread mockery and satirical comments from the Chinese Internet community, due to the Western perception being drastically different from the reality in China.[131]

Comparison to other countries edit

Russia edit

Around 80% of Russians will reportedly get a digital profile that will document personal successes and failures in less than a decade under the government's comprehensive plans to digitize the economy. Observers have compared this to China's social credit system,[132] although Deputy Prime Minister Maxim Akimov has denied that, saying a Chinese-style social credit system is a "threat".[133][134]

United Kingdom edit

In 2018, the New Economics Foundation compared the Chinese citizen score to other rating systems in the United Kingdom. These included using data from a citizen's credit score, phone usage, rent payment, and so on, to filter job applications, determine access to social services, determine advertisements served, etc.[135][136]

United States edit

Some media outlets have compared the social credit system to credit scoring systems in the United States.[137][138][139] According to Mike Elgan of Fast Company, "an increasing number of societal "privileges" related to transportation, accommodations, communications and the rates US citizens pay for services (like insurance) are either controlled by technology companies or affected by how we use technology services. And Silicon Valley's rules for being allowed to use their services are getting stricter."[137]

Venezuela edit

In 2017, Venezuela started developing a smart-card ID known as the "carnet de la patria" or "fatherland card", with the help of the Chinese telecom company ZTE.[140] The system included a database which stores details like birthdays, family information, employment and income, property owned, medical history, state benefits received, presence on social media, membership in a political party and whether a person voted.[140] Many in Venezuela have expressed concern that the card is an attempt to tighten social control through monitoring all aspects of daily life.[141][142]

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External links edit

  • Official website  

social, credit, system, confused, with, social, credit, interdisciplinary, distributive, philosophy, zhima, credit, private, financial, credit, scoring, loyalty, program, group, chinese, 社会信用体系, pinyin, shèhuì, xìnyòng, tǐxì, national, credit, rating, blacklis. Not to be confused with social credit an interdisciplinary and distributive philosophy or Zhima Credit a private financial credit scoring and loyalty program by Ant Group The Social Credit System Chinese 社会信用体系 pinyin shehui xinyong tǐxi is a national credit rating and blacklist being developed by the government of China 1 The social credit initiative calls for the establishment of a record system so that businesses individuals and government institutions can be tracked and evaluated for trustworthiness 2 3 There are multiple forms of the social credit system being experimented with 4 5 while the national regulatory method is based on whitelisting termed redlisting in China and blacklisting 6 7 8 Social Credit SystemSimplified Chinese社会信用体系Traditional Chinese社會信用體系TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu Pinyinshehui xinyong tǐxiThe origin of the system can be traced back to the 1980s when the Chinese government attempted to develop a personal banking and financial credit rating system especially for rural individuals and small businesses who lacked documented records 9 The program first emerged in the early 2000s inspired by the credit scoring systems in other countries 1 The program initiated regional trials in 2009 before launching a national pilot with eight credit scoring firms in 2014 10 7 The Social Credit System is an extension to the existing legal and financial credit rating system in China 11 Managed by the National Development and Reform Commission NDRC the People s Bank of China PBOC and the Supreme People s Court SPC 12 the system was intended to standardize the credit rating function and perform financial and social assessment for businesses government institutions individuals and non government organizations 13 14 15 The Chinese government s stated aim is to enhance trust in society with the system and regulate businesses in areas such as food safety intellectual property and financial fraud 11 9 16 China s Social Credit System has been implicated in a number of controversies 17 18 There is no single social credit system or score Social credit remains a fragmented set of policies and systems which impact businesses more than individuals including financial credit reporting blacklists for judgment debtors based on specific court orders sectoral blacklists and redlists addressing non compliant and compliant companies and their owners no fly and no ride lists based on specific instances of train or plane passenger misconduct and voluntary local programs which can provide rewards based on individual scores but no penalties Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 2002 to 2014 1 3 2014 to 2020 1 4 2020 to present 2 Organization 2 1 Conceptualization 3 Implementation 3 1 Financial credit reporting 3 2 Redlists 3 3 Blacklists 3 3 1 Judgment defaulter blacklist 3 3 2 Sectoral blacklists 3 3 3 No fly and no ride lists 3 3 4 Procedures for removal from blacklists 3 4 For companies 3 5 For government institutions 3 6 For individuals 3 7 For social organizations 3 8 Examples of city trial policies 4 Public opinions 4 1 Approvals 5 Criticism 6 Misconceptions 6 1 In popular culture 7 Comparison to other countries 7 1 Russia 7 2 United Kingdom 7 3 United States 7 4 Venezuela 8 References 9 External linksHistory editBackground edit The origin of the Social Credit System can be traced back to the early 1990s as part of attempts to develop personal banking and financial credit rating systems in China and was inspired by Western commercial credit systems like FICO Equifax and TransUnion 19 The credit system aims to facilitate financial assessment 19 in rural areas where individuals and small business entities often lacked financial documents In 1999 businesswoman Huang Wenyun wrote a report following her negative experiences with domestic business trustworthiness and her research into credit management in the United States business environment 20 17 18 At the time credit management and rating were largely unfamiliar concepts within the Chinese economy 20 17 Huang sent her report to Premier Zhu Rongji who approved it and in August 1999 ordered the People s Bank of China to take immediate action 20 18 In September 1999 the Institute of Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences began a research project on establishing a national credit management system 20 18 Huang contributed more than RMB 300 000 to fund the research initiative and sponsored fieldwork in the United States and Europe 20 18 In the United States the research group studied and prepared translations of 17 American credit reporting laws including the Fair Credit Reporting Act 20 18 In January 2000 the research group from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences compiled their research into a text titled National Credit Management System 20 18 Among these academics was Lin Junyue who became an important intellectual figure in the development of social credit 20 18 Premier Zhu approved the text and instructed government figures from ten ministries and commissions to begin studying the creation of a social credit management system 20 18 In late January 2000 the State Council released an essay by Zhu in which Zhu stated that China must vigorously rectify social credit 20 18 In March 2000 Zhu delivered the government s work report to the National People s Congress in which Zhu talked about the need to rectify social credit in the context of supervision of financial institutions fraud tax evasion and debt repayments 20 18 2002 to 2014 edit In 2002 the construction of a social credit system was formally announced during the 16th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party 20 71 The central government had not developed a specific vision for what a finished system might look like 20 71 Local governments were to develop pilot initiatives which could then guide the larger policy approach 20 71 In 2003 the State Council stated that the basic framework and operational mechanisms for a social credit should be established within five years 20 72 Most of the goals in this period were missed although the financial aspects of social credit developed much further than non financial aspects 20 72 75 Among the financial aspects of social credit which developed quickly was credit reporting 20 74 In March 2006 the People s Bank of China established the Credit Reference Center which has information regarding financial credit worthiness and has established basic financial records for 990 million Chinese citizens as of 2019 20 47 Its records relate only to finance and does not have any blacklist mechanism 20 47 In 2007 the Inter Ministerial Joint Conference on the Establishment of the SCS was established replacing the leading small group which had previously been the top policy organ for social credit issues 20 76 The initial blueprints of the Social Credit System were drafted in 2007 by government bodies 9 The social credit system also attempts to solve the moral vacuum problem insufficient market supervision and income inequality generated by the rapid economic and social changes since Chinese economic reform in 1978 9 As a result of these problems trust issues emerged in Chinese society such as food safety scandals labor law violations intellectual property thefts and corruption 9 Among the purposes of social credit is promotion and moral education regarding personal integrity and honesty 21 104 The policy of the social credit system traces its origin from both policing and work management practices 9 The government of modern China has maintained systems of paper records on individuals and households such as the dang an 档案 and hukǒu 户口 which officials might refer to but these systems do not provide the same degree and rapidity of feedback and consequences for Chinese citizens as the integrated electronic system because of the much greater difficulty of aggregating paper records for rapid robust analysis 5 The Social Credit System also originated from grid style social management a policing strategy first implemented in select locations from 2001 and 2002 during the administration of Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin in specific locations across mainland China In 2002 the Jiang administration proposed a social credit system as part of the promotion of a unified open competitive and orderly modern market system 19 In its first phase grid style policing was a system for more effective communication between public security bureaus Within a few years the grid system was adapted for use in distributing social services Grid management provided the authorities not only with greater situational awareness on the group level but also enhanced the tracking and monitoring of individuals 9 22 In 2018 sociologist Zhang Lifan explained that Chinese society today is still deficient in trust People often expect to be cheated or to get in trouble even if they are innocent He believes that it is due to the Cultural Revolution where friends and family members were deliberately pitted against each other and millions of Chinese were killed The stated purpose of the social credit system is to help Chinese people trust each other again 22 One focus of social credit is to build judicial credibility through more effective enforcement of court orders 20 53 In 2013 the Supreme People s Court SPC of China started a blacklist of debtors with roughly 32 000 names The list has since been described as a first step towards a national Social Credit System by state owned media 23 24 The SPC s blacklist is composed of Chinese citizens and companies that refuse to comply with court orders typically court orders to pay a fine or to repay a loan despite having the ability to do so 20 53 It is hosted online at the Supreme People s Court judgment defaulter blacklist portal and the information is shared with Credit China and the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System 20 60 The SPC also began working with private companies For example Sesame Credit began deducting credit points from people who defaulted on court fines 23 Although there was institutional enthusiasm for a social credit system during the 2004 to 2014 period implementation was adversely impacted by planning difficulties stemming from the relationship between credit reporting initiatives which were defined narrowly and regulatory objectives which were more vaguely defined 20 10 A lack of central coordination resulted in institutional bottlenecks 20 10 2014 to 2020 edit The State Council sought to accelerate the development of social credit and in 2014 issued the Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System 2014 2020 20 78 The Planning Outline was a major step in China s approach to developing a social credit system before the 2014 Planning Outline there had been only one high level policy document issued in 2007 20 79 Since the Planning Outline the State Council has issued new guidance annually 20 79 The Planning Outline focused primarily on economic activity in commerce government affairs social integrity and judicial credibility 20 79 It set broad goals intended to be reached by 2020 1 a reward and punishment mechanism should be fully effective 2 a basic credit investigation that covers the whole of society should be established 3 credit oversight mechanisms should be established 4 credit service markets should be performing well and 5 fundamental social credit laws regulations and standards should be established 20 79 In 2015 the People s Bank of China licensed eight companies to begin a trial of social credit systems 7 25 Among these eight firms is Sesame Credit owned by Alibaba Group and operated by Ant Financial Tencent and China s biggest ride sharing and online dating services Didi Chuxing and Baihe com respectively 16 7 In general multiple firms collaborated with the government to develop the software and algorithms used to calculate credit 16 26 Commercial pilot programs developed by private Chinese conglomerates that have the authorization from the state to test out social credit experiments The pilots are more widespread than their local government counterparts but function on a voluntary basis citizens can decide to opt out of these systems at any time on request Users with good scores are offered advantages such as easier access to credit loans discounts for car and bike sharing services fast tracked visa applications free health check ups and preferential treatment at hospitals 27 In 2016 the State Council encouraged market entities to provide preferential treatment to those with outstanding financial credit records and differentiated services to those with seriously untrustworthy records 20 54 The Chinese central government originally considered having the Social Credit System be run by a private firm but by 2017 it acknowledged the need for third party administration However no licenses to private companies were granted 7 By mid 2017 the Chinese government had decided that none of the pilot programs would receive authorization to be official credit reporting systems The reasons include conflict of interest the remaining control of the government as well as the lack of cooperation in data sharing among the firms that participate in the development 5 However the Social Credit System s operation by a seemingly external association such as a formal collaboration between private firms has not been ruled out yet 7 In November 2017 Sesame Credit denied that Sesame Credit data was shared with the Chinese government 28 In 2017 the People s Bank of China issued a jointly owned license to Baihang Credit valid for three years 29 Baihang Credit is co owned by the National Internet Finance Association 36 and the eight other companies 8 each allowing the state to maintain control and oversee the creation of new commercial pilot programs 30 As of mid 2018 only pilot schemes had been tested without any official implementation 31 32 33 34 35 36 excessive citations Private companies have also signed contracts with provincial governments to set up the basic infrastructure for the Social Credit System at the provincial level 37 As of March 2017 137 commercial credit reporting companies were active on the Chinese market 14 As part of the development of the Social Credit System the Chinese government has been monitoring the progress of third party Chinese credit rating systems 38 Ultimately Chinese government dropped the support for privately developed credit rating system and these pilot projects remained as corporate loyalty programs 15 In December 2017 the National Development and Reform Commission and People s Bank of China selected model cities that demonstrated the steps needed to make a functional and efficient implementation of the Social Credit System Among them are Hangzhou Nanjing Xiamen Chengdu Suzhou Suqian Huizhou Wenzhou Weihai Weifang Yiwu and Rongcheng 39 40 These pilots were deemed successful in their handling of blacklists and redlists their creation of credit sharing platforms and their data sharing efforts with the other cities By 2018 some restrictions had been placed on citizens which state owned media described as the first step toward creating a nationwide social credit system 31 32 33 34 35 36 excessive citations The local government Social Credit System experiments are focused more on the construction of transparent rule based systems in contrast with the rating systems used in the commercial pilots Citizens often begin with an initial score to which points are added or deducted depending on their actions The specific number of points for each action are often listed in publicly available catalogs Cities also experimented with a multi level system in which districts decide on scorekeepers who are responsible for reporting scores to higher ups Some experiments also allowed citizens to appeal the scores they were attributed 41 In July 2019 an NDRC spokesperson stated that at a press conference that personal credit scores can be combined with incentives for trustworthiness but cannot be used for punishments 20 171 The Hong Kong Government stated in July 2019 that claims that the social credit system will be rolled out in Hong Kong are totally unfounded and stated that the system will not be implemented there 42 In 2019 high level NDRC officials stated that over 10 of people blacklisted for their commission of tax fraud had repaid their taxes that the bad credit rate had decreased by 22 7 and that the proportion of companies blacklisted had decreased 20 124 In the view of these officials these were remarkable results 20 124 2020 to present edit In 2020 the Supreme People s Court announced that a nationwide total of 7 51 million blacklisted judgment defaulters had fulfilled their legal obligations and been removed from the judgment defaulter blacklist accounting for half of the blacklisted judgment defaulters as of that date 20 124 As a result of the COVID 19 pandemic various aspects of social credit were modified 20 134 137 On February 1 2020 the People s Bank of China announced it would temporarily suspend the inclusion of mortgage and credit card payments in the credit record of people impacted by the pandemic 20 134 Private financial credit scoring companies including Sesame Credit suspended financial credit ratings 20 134 Various cities established mechanisms to incentivize companies to provide pandemic relief with measures including redlisting for those donating funds and supplies with benefits like simplified administrative procedures increased policy support or increased financial support 20 135 On the enforcement side of social credit provinces and cities promulgated regulations emphasizing heavy penalties for price hikes violence against doctors counterfeit medical supplies refusal to comply with pandemic prevention measures and wildlife trade violations 20 134 In 2020 the rights protection metrics in the NDRC s City Credit Status Monitoring and Early Warning Indicators emphasized that cities must establish transparent credit repair procedures handled within an appropriate timeframe 20 138 It also emphasized that cities should prevent the over generalization of the concept of credit stating that individual behavior such as petitioning the government unpaid property fees running red lights among other listed examples must not be included in a person s credit record 20 138 The State Council issued its Guiding Opinions on Further Improving Systems for Restraining the Untrustworthy and Building Mechanisms for Building Credit Worthiness that have Long term Effect in November 2020 20 139 The central message of the Guiding Opinions was that new blacklists should not be created on an ad hoc basis and that social credit should not be applied in policy areas without sufficient consensus 20 139 It stated that credit repair processes must be improved that blacklists must only be used in instances of severe harm and that information security and privacy should be prioritized 20 139 In November 2021 the United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO adopted a Recommendation on the Ethics of AI 20 176 Among its recommendations is that AI systems should not be used for social scoring or mass surveillance purposes 20 176 China is a signatory of the document 20 176 Following their submission for public comment China in December 2021 issued the National List of Basic Penalty Measures for Untrustworthiness and the National Directory of Public Credit Information 20 140 The National Directory establishes limitations on what types of credit information can be collected or used as a basis for social credit penalties or rewards 20 140 It describes three categories of data 1 information that is appropriate for consideration 2 information on violations that can be considered only when the circumstances of the violation are severe and 3 information that can never be included as part of social credit 20 140 141 Appropriate information for consideration includes information on the execution of judicial judgments administrative violations among other material and positive recognition for trustworthy behavior 20 140 Information appropriate only when the circumstances of the violation are severe include small payment arrears or public transportation fare evasion 20 141 The National Directory bans the consideration of private information like religious preferences or government petitioning activity 20 141 The December 2021 National List s purpose is to further standardize penalty measures 20 143 It specifies that administrative bodies cannot extent penalties beyond those provided in national level law and regulation 20 143 In a 2022 directive the State Council stated that it will actively explore innovative ways to use the credit concept and methods to solve difficulties bottlenecks and painful points that restrict the country s economic and social activities 19 On 14 November 2022 the NDRC issued a draft Law on the Establishment of the Social Credit System 20 188 According to academic Vincent Brussee the draft was deeply unsatisfactory to SCS observers worldwide It did not stipulate anything not already regulated in one of the many recent documents on the system The draft just copy pasted bits form those 20 188 As of 2022 over 62 different Social Credit System pilot programs were implemented by local governments 19 The pilot programs began following the release of the 2014 Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System by Chinese authorities The government oversees the creation and development of these governmental pilots by requesting they each publish a regular interdepartmental agreement on joint enforcement of rewards and punishments for trustworthy and untrustworthy conduct 43 Though some reports stated social credit would be powered by artificial intelligence AI as of 2023 penalty decisions were made by humans not AI and digitization remained limited 20 14 Credit systems for local government remained undeveloped and resemble incentivized loyalty programs like those run by airlines 20 14 Participation is fully voluntary and there are no enticement beyond losing access to minor rewards For fear of overreach and pushback Chinese central government banned punishments for low scores and minor offences 15 During the city trials pilot programs only saw limited participation 19 Many people living in pilot program cities are unaware of the programs 19 In Xiamen 210 059 users activated their social credit account roughly 5 percent of Xiamen population 60 000 or 1 5 percent of population in Wuhu participated the system Hangzhou has 1 872 316 15 percent participants and fewer regularly use the system Scores are not shared between cities as the scoring criteria and mechanisms are different 15 By 2023 most private social credit initiatives had been shut down by the People s Bank of China and regulations had cracked down on most local scoring pilot programs 20 12 Organization editSocial credit in China is a broad policy category seeking to enforce legal obligations including laws regulations and contracts 20 3 Social credit does not itself bring new restrictions it focuses on increasing implementation of existing restrictions 21 105 There are multiple social credit systems in China some of which are designed and operated by the state while others are operated by private companies 19 China s governmental approaches to social credit are described by various sets of documents issued by different institutions 21 103 There is no integrated system 20 3 nor a comprehensive document setting out a unified approach 21 103 Generally the different approaches to social credit are united by the theme of increasing digitization data collection and data centralization 21 103 There is no unified numerical credit score for businesses or individuals rather national and local platforms use different evaluation or rating systems 15 44 Due to the differences in various pilot programs and a fragment system structure information regarding the scoring mechanism is often conflicting 45 15 Inspired by FICO 46 47 a numerical social credit score calculated by individual behavior and activities was given to citizens in certain pilot programs developed by financial firms or localized initiatives 15 48 However these practices were not widespread applications and eventually the numerical score mechanism was limited to private credit rating and loyalty programs 4 49 Private involvements were ultimately abandoned by the government 50 The system includes sanctions for the offenders unlike in the past where the offenders were punished by one supervising agency or court they now face sanctions from multiple agencies greatly increasing their effect Though the sanctions are severe they affect a small part of companies and individuals By publicizing these punishments and blacklists through state media and through other agencies the system is aimed to create a deterrence effect 15 Social credit is an example of China s top level design 顶层设计 approach It is coordinated by the Central Comprehensively Deepening Reforms Commission 14 Social credit when referred by the Chinese government generally covers two different concepts The first is traditional financial creditworthiness where it documents the financial history of individuals and companies and score them on how well they are able to pay off future loans The second concept is social creditworthiness where the government is stating that there needs to be higher trust in society And to build such trust the government had proposed to combat corruption scammers tax evasion counterfeiting of goods false advertising pollution and other problematic issues and to create the mechanisms to keep individuals and companies accountable for such transgressions 51 Conceptualization edit Scholars have conceptualized four different types of systems These four systems are not interconnected but relatively independent from each other with their own jurisdictions rules and logic 5 4 Business trustworthiness system Chinese 商务诚信体系 Blacklist system for discredited business organizations This system is regulated by People s Bank of China financial credit rating system and commercial credit rating system 52 Government trustworthiness system Chinese 政务诚信体系 Evaluation system targeting civil servants and government institutions 52 Social trustworthiness system Chinese 社会诚信体系 Blacklist system for discredited individuals Social trustworthiness system most closely relates to China s mass surveillance systems 52 Judiciary public trust system Chinese 司法公信体系 Blacklist system for judgment defaulters This system is regulated by Supreme People s Court 52 53 As of 2023 the government has only created a system that is primarily focused on assessing businesses rather than on individuals and consists of a database that collects the data on corporate regulation compliance from a number of government agencies Kendra Schaefer head of tech policy research at the Beijing based consultancy firm Trivium China had described the system in a report for the US government s US China Economic and Security Review Commission as being roughly equivalent to the IRS FBI EPA USDA FDA HHS HUD Department of Energy Department of Education and every courthouse police station and major utility company in the US sharing regulatory records across a single platform 6 The database can be openly accessed by any Chinese citizen on the newly created website called Credit China Its database also includes random information like a list of approved robot building companies hospitals that have committed insurance fraud universities that are deemed legitimate and a list of individuals who have defaulted on a court judgement 51 Implementation editSocial credit does not itself bring new restrictions it focuses on increasing implementation of existing restrictions 21 105 Although the Chinese government announced in 2014 that it would implement a nationwide social credit system by 2020 as of 2023 no full fledged system exists 21 123 124 Implementation of social credit is primarily focused on marketplace behavior 20 14 As of 2023 about 1 of companies and 0 3 of individuals receive social credit related penalties per year 20 14 Financial credit reporting edit National financial credit reporting for businesses and individuals is provided by the People s Bank of China which does not assign any numerical scoring 49 Redlists edit Redlisting practices seek to incentivize exemplary personal behavior or business compliance 20 118 Redlist practices vary significantly and there are no top level regulations or guidance addressing redlists in detail 20 118 119 The most common benefit to redlisted companies include reduced administrative burdens or simplified procedures 20 118 119 Part of the government logic for redlisting companies is that it makes it facilitates regulators ability to focus on companies with a worse compliance record 20 119 Redlisted individuals may receive benefits like parking and public transit discounts or discount tourist site tickets 20 119 Blacklists edit Blacklisting is based on specific instances of misconduct not any numerical score 21 103 The Central Government operates a number of national and regional blacklists based on various types of violations The court system is available for businesses organizations and individuals to appeal their violations As of 2019 it typically took 2 5 years to be removed from the blacklist but early removal is also possible if the blacklisted person fulfills legal obligations or remedies 54 55 Three main types of blacklists exist 1 the judgment defaulter blacklist 2 sectoral blacklists and 3 no fly no ride lists 20 107 Before being added to a blacklist a person or company must be informed of the decision and the legal basis for it 20 115 Blacklists may be publicized although as of at least 2023 there is no uniform method for doing so 20 115 Some blacklist portals can be searched online while others are uploaded as PDFs or image files 20 118 Blacklisted parties are sometimes displayed in public settings including on the Internet in newspapers or television 20 118 Judgment defaulter blacklist edit See also Judgment defaulter Before 2013 the process of obtaining court ordered enforcement against judgment debtors was fragmented 20 108 In 2013 the Supreme People s Court issued the Several Provisions on Announcement of the Judgment Defaulter Blacklist which became the foundational regulation for the judgment defaulter blacklist 20 108 It stated that to be included on the list a defaulter must be capable of complying with the court orders but actively avoids doing so 20 108 Based on the idea that judgment defaulters should repay their debts before purchasing luxuries once added to the list judgment defaulters are restricted from 1 travelling via plane high speed train or first class non high speed train 2 staying at star rated hotels or golf courses 3 purchasing real estate 4 leasing high grade office buildings hotels or apartments 5 purchasing non business essential vehicles 6 holiday trips 7 sending children to high fee private schools 8 purchasing high premium insurance products and 9 other non life and non work essential consumption behavior 20 108 109 In 2019 a Hebei court released an app showing a map of deadbeat debtors within 500 meters and encouraged users to report individuals who they believed could repay their debts 56 A spokesman of the court stated that It s a part of our measures to enforce our rulings and create a socially credible environment 57 The Supreme People s Court s blacklist is one of its most important enforcement tools and its use has resulted in the recovery of tens of trillions of RMB for fines and delinquent repayments as of 2023 20 53 Sectoral blacklists edit Many sectoral blacklists exist and are managed by a variety of regulatory and administrative bodies 20 110 Primarily the penalties for being included on these blacklists are discretionary restrictions in administrative processes and interactions with the government 20 111 For example regulators may exclude a company on a sectoral blacklist from participating in public procurement revoke government funding or subsidies cancel permits or revoke qualifications or certifications or restrict the issuance of corporate bonds 20 111 Penalties cannot be developed ad hoc and must instead be based in national level law and regulation 20 111 Penalties from inclusion on sectoral blacklists may be imposed both on the violating company as well as legal representatives senior company management and the staff directly responsible for the violation that placed the company on the blacklist 20 112 Multiple government bodies may impose restrictions as a result of a person or company s inclusion on a sectoral blacklist 20 110 111 The availability of sectoral blacklist with the public also means that potential business partners may act accordingly and decline to deal with a blacklisted company 20 111 No fly and no ride lists edit Inclusion on the no ride list or no fly list results from specific instances of misconduct on trains or planes 20 113 Misconduct resulting in inclusion on the no ride or no fly lists can include violation of safety regulations harassing other passengers or transportation workers smoking scalping tickets or using counterfeit tickets 20 113 Inclusion on the list prohibits a person from buying new tickets for a designated time period usually six to twelve months 20 113 This is the only penalty under the no ride or no fly list and inclusion on these blacklists has no impact in other areas of life or business 20 113 By May 2018 several million flight and high speed train trips had been denied to people who had been blacklisted 32 As of June 2019 according to the National Development and Reform Commission of China 26 82 million air tickets as well as 5 96 million high speed rail tickets had been denied to people who were deemed untrustworthy 失信 on a blacklist and 4 37 million dishonest people had chosen to fulfill their duties required by the law 58 59 In July 2019 additional 2 56 million flight tickets as well as 90 thousand high speed train tickets were denied to those on the blacklist 60 The no fly list is administered by Civil Aviation Administration of China 20 113 The no ride list is administered by the National Railway Administration 20 113 Procedures for removal from blacklists edit After a blacklist decision becomes effective the blacklisted party can file for credit repair 20 115 Through the credit repair process a violator corrects the impact of the underlying violation and commits to abide by laws and regulations in the future 20 115 Companies undergoing credit repair typically must supply evidence that they have corrected their violations 20 123 Companies may also have to agree to a credit pledge in which they commit to upholding laws and regulations commit to abiding by contracts and agree to be subject to more severe penalties for any future violations 20 123 If authorities approve of the request for credit repair the violator is removed from the blacklist and penalties are ended 20 115 For companies edit The Social Credit System is meant to provide an answer to the problem of lack of trust on the Chinese market As of 2020 update the corporate regulation function of the system appears to be more advanced than other parts of the system and the Corporate Social Credit System has been the primary focus of government attention 11 As of 2020 update over 73 3 of the enforcement action since 2014 is targeted toward companies the largest part of all enforcements while around 1 2 of all companies were sanctioned by the system annually 15 For businesses the Social Credit System is meant to serve as a market regulation mechanism The goal is to establish a self enforcing regulatory regime fueled by big data in which businesses exercise self restraint 企业自我约束 The basic idea is that with a functional credit system in place companies will comply with government policies and regulations to avoid having their scores lowered by disgruntled employees customers or clients 14 For example the central government can use social credit data to offer risk assessed grants and loans to small and medium enterprises SMEs encouraging banks to offer greater loan access for SMEs 11 As currently envisioned companies with good credit scores will enjoy benefits such as good credit conditions lower tax rates less custom checks 11 and more investment opportunities Companies with bad credit scores will potentially face unfavorable conditions for new loans higher tax rates investment restrictions and lower chances to participate in publicly funded projects 14 Government plans also envision real time monitoring of a business s activities In that case infractions on the part of a business could result in a lower score almost instantly However whether this will actually happen depends on the future implementation of the system as well as on the availability of technology needed for this kind of monitoring 14 To improve credit score companies need to conform to the government rules such as following the COVID 19 containment guidelines 11 For government institutions edit Government institutions receive the second highest number of enforcement actions accounting for 13 3 of the penalties as of 2020 update while less than 0 1 of all government entities were sanctioned by the system annually 15 The social credit system targets government agencies assesses local governments performance and focuses on financial problems such as local governments debts and contract defaults 15 The Central Government hopes the system can improve government self discipline 11 Local governments are also encouraged and rewarded by the social credit system if they successfully implement and follow the orders from the central government 56 For individuals edit As of 2020 individuals receive 10 3 of all enforcement actions affecting around 0 15 to 0 3 of the national population annually 15 The dealing of the social credit system with individuals focuses on the financial trustworthiness of individual citizens The dealing of the system with individuals is primarily focused on debt repayment though major violations of the law have also been sanctioned 15 One major focus is that of the debt dodger laolai a phrase which refers to those who can pay their debts but choose not to 19 A laolai blacklist is maintained by the Supreme People s Court 19 In addition to dishonest and fraudulent financial behavior there have been proposals in some cities to officially list several behaviors as negative factors of credit ratings including playing loud music or eating in rapid transits 61 violating traffic rules such as jaywalking and red light violations 62 63 making reservations at restaurants or hotels but not showing up 64 failing to correctly sort personal waste 65 66 67 fraudulently using other people s public transportation ID cards 68 etc on the other hand including behavior listed as positive factors of credit ratings such as donating blood donating to charity volunteering for community services praising government efforts on social media and so on 69 70 71 However due to the system mainly relying on digitized administrative documents early efforts to integrate behavioral data into the system were mainly discarded 15 There are various punishments for debtors Delinquent debtors are placed on blacklists maintained by Chinese courts and shared with the Ministry of Public Security which controls the country s entry exit checkpoints Individuals with outstanding debts can be subject to exit bans and prevented from leaving the country as a way of encouraging or forcing the collection of debt According to the Financial Times as of 2017 some 6 7 million debtors had already been placed on blacklists and prevented from exiting the country as a result of the new policy 72 Future rewards of having a high score might include easier access to loans and jobs and priority during bureaucratic paperwork A person with poor social credit may be denied employment in places such as banks state owned enterprises or as a business executive The Chinese government encourages checking whether candidates names appear on the blacklist when hiring 73 needs update In certain test programs public humiliation is used as a mechanism to deter sanctioned individuals 55 74 75 76 Mugshots of blacklisted individuals are sometimes displayed on large LED screens on buildings or shown before the movie in movie theaters 77 Certain personal information of the blacklisted people is deliberately made accessible to the public and is displayed online as well as at various public venues such as movie theaters and buses while some cities have also banned children of untrustworthy residents from attending private schools and even universities 78 79 80 81 needs update People with high credit ratings may receive rewards such as less waiting time at hospitals and government agencies discounts at hotels greater likelihood of receiving employment offers and so on 68 69 70 82 needs update According to Sarah Cook of Freedom House in 2019 city level pilot projects for the social credit system have included rewarding individuals for aiding authorities in enforcing restrictions of religious practices including coercing practitioners of Falun Gong to renounce their beliefs and reporting on Uighurs who publicly pray fast during Ramadan or perform other Islamic practices 56 83 In a October 2022 study professors from Princeton University Freie Universitat Berlin and Pennsylvania State University also found that repressing protesters petitioners journalists and political activists via the SCS is common among Chinese localities 84 For social organizations edit As of 2020 non government organizations receive 3 3 of all enforcement actions Although the enforcement remain a small group in numerical terms but their inclusion has an important implication as it affects foreign NGOs operated within China 15 Examples of city trial policies edit Most initiatives under the social credit system do not involve actual numerical scores instead documentation of specific offenses is recorded in one s credit profile the exception being the trial programs launched by some cities and communities The actual policy varies greatly from city to city and participation is voluntary Local credit profiles are not shared between cities Since the early 2010s there have been pilot programs started in a number of cities to test out and help build the future social credit system However many of these pilot programs were publicly criticised in the state media and failed to proceed 85 By 2019 the central authorities issued formal clarification that scores can not be used to punish citizens citation needed As a result many pilot programs were discontinued while some pilot cities revised their programs Examples were Wenzhou which abandoned their initial program and in 2019 revised it to be an encouragement only scheme Another was Rongcheng which changed their pilot program in 2021 so that it was strictly voluntary and can only issue rewards According to a 2022 article from the Mercator Institute for China Studies MERICS the only social credit system programs that continue to have personal scores of individuals are strictly for issuing positive incentives only 85 Under some policies higher scores can earn a participant cheaper public transportation shorter security lines in subways or tax reductions 86 204 Non comprehensive examples of city trial policies Stage Type Introduction Policy City trials Social 2016 Starting 1 May 2016 Shanghai elderly residents may sue their children or other family members if the latter do not regularly visit the elderly and the courts in Shanghai may rule that the children or other family members must visit the elderly and if rejected the children or relevant family members will be blacklisted 87 88 City trials Social 2019 Beijing government officially announced that it will start to explore and test a Personal Credit Score 89 City trials Social 2019 In Beijing inappropriate behavior in rapid transit systems including playing loud music or eating except for infants and sick people could result in a negative record in local credit profiles 61 90 City trials Social 2018 In selected intersections of Beijing and Shenzhen personal information of traffic violators is publicly displayed on the screens at traffic crosses and red light violations may be recorded in credit profiles in the future 91 92 93 94 City trials Social 2019 Starting 1 August 2019 Guangzhou residents who cheat in national provincial or municipal examinations will receive a negative record in their credit profiles 68 95 Starting 1 August 2019 Guangzhou residents who fraudulently use other people s public transportation identification cards or fake ID cards or occupy the seats of others may receive a negative record in their credit profiles 68 95 City trials Social 2018 2019 Starting 1 November 2019 Shenzhen residents who are at least 14 years old who violate traffic rules such as jaywalking and crossing at a red light once caught will receive a negative record in their credit profiles For residents under the age of 14 who violate traffic rules their legal guardians will need to take educational courses or complete certain social services otherwise the traffic violation will be recorded in their credit profiles 62 96 97 98 In Shenzhen traffic violations of motor vehicle or moped drivers such as inappropriate use of high beam and drunk driving may be recorded in the credit profiles of the drivers if the driver receives a traffic fine 5 times or more in a year or has 3 unresolved violations or more in a year they will receive a negative record in their profile 62 96 97 99 City trials Social 2019 Starting 1 August 2019 individuals and organizations in Hangzhou who do not comply with the waste sorting rules of the city will receive a negative record in their credit profiles and will have to pay a corresponding amount of fine 67 100 City trials Social 2019 Starting 8 July 2019 moped drivers and pedestrians who make 5 or more traffic violations including red light violations in a year will receive a negative record in their credit profiles in Nanjing In some places personal information of traffic violators is publicly displayed on the screens at traffic crosses 63 101 102 City trials Social 2016 Starting in 2016 Suzhou city launched Osmanthus score 25 types of residents behavior will cost a drop in their credit scores including cheating in online video games making reservations at hotels or restaurants but not showing up failing to pay cellphone bills promptly failing to pick up take out foods ordered etc 64 70 On the other hand making blood donations or doing volunteer work may boost one s credit score 70 City trials Social 2017 Jinan city launched penalty point system for dog regulation Starting from 1 January 2017 dog owners lose three points for keeping their dogs off leash in public places allowing their dogs to disturb other people not cleaning up after their dogs etc Owners lose another three points on the second offense They lose all 12 points for the third time and are banned from owning a dog for a period of 5 years owners also lose all 12 points immediately if their dogs are found unregistered with the government or faulting annual review 103 104 105 Dogs of owners with zero points are confiscated by the government until the owner takes free courses on relevant city rules and passes corresponding exams 103 104 105 Shanghai Police Department intended to establish a point system in 2019 for dog owner offense which is linked to the owners overall credit profiles 106 107 City trials Business 2018 In November 2018 a detailed plan was produced for further implementation of the program for 2018 2020 in Beijing The plans included blacklisting people from public transport and publicly disclosing individuals and businesses untrustworthiness ratings 108 109 Public opinions editWriting in 2023 academic Vincent Brussee observes that European misconceptions of social credit in China have become a source of amusement among Chinese Internet users 20 3 Approvals edit In a 2018 study 80 of respondents either strongly approved or approved of China s Social Credit System while one percent disapproved 19 The study was conducted by Professor Genia Kostka of Free University of Berlin and was based on a cross regional Internet survey of 2 209 Chinese citizens of various backgrounds 110 111 The study found a surprisingly high degree of approval of SCSs across respondent groups and that more socially advantaged citizens wealthier better educated and urban residents show the strongest approval of SCSs along with older people 110 Kostka explained in the paper that while one might expect such knowledgeable citizens to be most concerned about the privacy implications of SCS they instead appear to embrace SCSs because they interpret it through frames of benefit generation and promoting honest dealings in society and the economy instead of privacy violation 110 In August 2019 assistant researcher Zhengjie Fan of China Institute of International Studies published an article claiming that the current punishment policies such as the blacklist do not overstep the limits of law He argued that since 2014 China s Social Credit System and the credit system of the market had grown to complement each other forming a mutually beneficial interaction 112 According to Doing Business 2019 by World Bank Group which ranks 190 countries on the ease of doing business within their borders China rose from 78th place in previous year to 46th place and Fan claimed that the Social Credit System has played an important role 112 113 In a October 2022 study professors from Princeton University Freie Universitat Berlin Genia Kostka and Pennsylvania State University discovered through a field survey of college students in China that revealing the repressive potential of the SCS significantly reduces support for the system whereas emphasizing its function in maintaining social order does not increase support 84 Additionally the professors found that a nationwide survey of Chinese netizens showed higher support for the SCS among Chinese citizens who learned about it through state media 84 Criticism editChinese academics have produced a substantial body of work analyzing social credit in China 20 7 As of 2023 the large majority of Chinese scholarships accept the legitimacy of social credit as a whole although there are also criticisms of different approaches or implementation efforts 20 7 8 In several instances academics criticisms of social credit have been adopted and re issued by state media outlets including Xinhua and People s Daily 20 8 In October 2019 Professor Kui Shen of the Law School of Peking University published a paper in China Legal Science suggesting that some of the then current credit policies violated the rule of law or Rechtsstaat that they infringed the legal rights of residents and organizations possibly violated the principle of respecting and protecting human rights especially the right to reputation the right to privacy as well as personal dignity and overstepped the boundary of reasonable punishment 114 In May 2020 Chinese investigative media group Caixin reported that business social credit systems in China were insufficient in deterring problematic business activities and that the social credit system was easy to game in favour of businesses 115 China s Social Credit System has been implicated in a number of controversies Western critics view social credit as an intrusive mechanism that infringes on privacy 18 In October 2018 U S Vice President Mike Pence criticized the social credit system describing it as an Orwellian system premised on controlling virtually every facet of human life 116 In January 2019 George Soros criticized the social credit system saying it would give CCP leader Xi Jinping total control over the people of China 117 118 From 2017 to 2018 researchers argued that the credit system would be part of the government s plan to automate their authoritarian rule over the Chinese population 9 119 120 In June 2019 Samantha Hoffman of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute argued that there are no genuine protections for the people and entities subject to the system In China there is no such thing as the rule of law Regulations that can be largely apolitical on the surface can be political when the Chinese Communist Party CCP decides to use them for political purposes 121 In August 2018 Professor Genia Kostka of Free University of Berlin stated in her published paper that if successful in their effort the Communist Party will possess a powerful means of quelling dissent one that is comparatively low cost and which does not require the overt and unpopular use of coercion by the state 27 In December 2017 Human Rights Watch described the proposed social credit system as chilling and filled with arbitrary abuses 122 Misconceptions editThere has been a degree of misreporting and misconceptions in English language mass media due to translation errors sensationalism conflicting information and lack of comprehensive analysis 17 4 123 49 124 Examples of such popular misconceptions include a widespread misassumption that Chinese citizens are rewarded and punished based on a numerical score social credit score assigned by the system that its decisions are taken by AI and that it constantly monitors Chinese citizens 15 8 44 125 1 126 In July 2019 Wired reported that there existed misconceptions regarding the Social Credit System of China It argued that Western concerns about what could happen with China s Social Credit System have in some ways outstripped discussions about what s already really occurring The exaggerated portrayals may also help to downplay surveillance efforts in other parts of the world The rise of misconception according to Jeremy Daum of Yale University is contributed by translation errors the difference in word usage and so on 123 In May 2019 Logic published an article by Shazeda Ahmed who argued that f oreign media has distorted the social credit system into a technological dystopia far removed from what is actually happening in China She pointed out that common misconceptions included the beliefs that surveillance data is connected with a centralized database that human activities online and offline are assigned with actual values that can be deducted and that every citizen in China has a numerical score that is calculated by computer algorithm 4 In March and February 2019 MIT Technology Review stated that i n the West the system is highly controversial and often portrayed as an AI powered surveillance regime that violates human rights 127 However the magazine reported that many scholars argue that social credit scores won t have the wide scale controlling effect presumed the system acts more as a tool of propaganda than a tool of enforcement and that o thers point out that it is simply an extension of Chinese culture s long tradition of promoting good moral behavior and that Chinese citizens have a completely different perspective on privacy and freedom 128 In November 2018 Foreign Policy listed some factors which contributed to the misconception of China s credit system The potential factors included the scale and variety of the social credit system program and the difficulties of comprehensive reporting that comes with it 49 In May 2018 Rogier Creemers of Leiden University stated that despite the Chinese government s intentions of utilizing big data and artificial intelligence the regulatory method of SCS remained relatively crude His research concluded that it is perhaps more accurate to conceive of the SCS as an ecosystem of initiatives broadly sharing a similar underlying logic than a fully unified and integrated machine for social control 30 In November 2018 Bing Song director of the Berggruen Institute China Center posted an opinion piece in The Washington Post arguing that the Western media and institutions have misreported the details and mechanics of the Social Credit system The article suggested that media have confused private score reporting mechanisms with the national system He also noted that penalties are executed based on the Supreme Court laws and regulations while private scoring companies and government agencies are not capable of enacting penalties He argued the widespread media reports often ignored the fact that local governments can be targeted in the blacklists and the scoring systems and its effects were exaggerated by many media stories He also argued that the cultural expectations of the government and its role in China are different than that of in other countries 129 In March 2021 The Diplomat remarked that the assumption by Western observers that the Social Credit System is an Orwellian surveillance system exaggerates the reality and purpose of the system in real life Despite the claim the social credit system is an extension of bond issuance risk assessment credit ratings introduced in China in the 1980s and primarily serves the function of a financial risk assessment tool 11 In October 2021 The Washington based think tank The Jamestown Foundation explored the function of the Social Credit System and concluded that there were widespread misinterpretations regarding the function and mechanism of the SCS The think tank found that misinformed perceptions of an algorithm driven citizen rating system are originated from early analyses that confused the regulation enforcement mechanisms and the morality propaganda campaigns of the SCS initiative Furthermore many failed to distinguish between the government regulations and the private credit rating systems Corporations hyperbolically promoted the scores predictive abilities which may have resonated with Western anxiety and concerns surrounding corporate data collection and government access to personal information 50 In 2022 academics Diana Fu and Rui Hou noted the persistence of Western misconceptions in their article Rating Citizens with China s Social Credit System stating Western media articles initially compared the system to an episode of the British sci fi series Black Mirror in which individuals every day behavior down to the minutiae were tracked and rated by other people and a big brother government Since then scholars and journalists have sought to dispel this dystopian depiction of the social credit system but the image continued to live on particularly after the Trump administration started to use it as part of its anti China policy in 2017 and 2018 19 In 2023 academic Filip Sebok wrote that perhaps the most common myth associated with social credit is that there is a single numerical score that records individuals behavior 21 104 No such score exists 21 104 Academic Vincent Brussee writes that as of 2023 hundreds of headlines have discussed the system but few have systematically broken down what the social credit system is and how it works Some studies refer to the breathtaking ambition of the system and the massive quantities of behavioural data going into the system without substantiating these claims in any way Others rely on assumptions of what the system will look like erroneously speculating that everyone will receive a social credit score that this score will be publicly available and that a bad rating will have far reaching consequences It is like a game of Chinese Whispers gone wrong 20 40 In popular culture edit In 2021 the social credit system was popularized as an Internet meme on various social media platforms VICE reported that the memes popularity reflects the widespread discontent toward the Chinese government over its restrictions of people s freedoms however the article noted the trend continued the existing misapprehension and misinformation regarding the SCS mechanism such as the idea that people in China are rewarded punished based on a numerical social credit score 125 The joke is often posed as a positive or negative action towards the Chinese government which affects the poster s social credit score positively or negatively 130 40 According to The Spectator the Western narrative of the social credit score received widespread mockery and satirical comments from the Chinese Internet community due to the Western perception being drastically different from the reality in China 131 Comparison to other countries editRussia edit Around 80 of Russians will reportedly get a digital profile that will document personal successes and failures in less than a decade under the government s comprehensive plans to digitize the economy Observers have compared this to China s social credit system 132 although Deputy Prime Minister Maxim Akimov has denied that saying a Chinese style social credit system is a threat 133 134 United Kingdom edit In 2018 the New Economics Foundation compared the Chinese citizen score to other rating systems in the United Kingdom These included using data from a citizen s credit score phone usage rent payment and so on to filter job applications determine access to social services determine advertisements served etc 135 136 United States edit See also Credit score in the United States and Criticism of credit scoring systems in the United States Some media outlets have compared the social credit system to credit scoring systems in the United States 137 138 139 According to Mike Elgan of Fast Company an increasing number of societal privileges related to transportation accommodations communications and the rates US citizens pay for services like insurance are either controlled by technology companies or affected by how we use technology services And Silicon Valley s rules for being allowed to use their services are getting stricter 137 Venezuela edit Main article Homeland card In 2017 Venezuela started developing a smart card ID known as the carnet de la patria or fatherland card with the help of the Chinese telecom company ZTE 140 The system included a database which stores details like birthdays family information employment and income property owned medical history state benefits received presence on social media membership in a political party and whether a person voted 140 Many in Venezuela have expressed concern that the card is an attempt to tighten social control through monitoring all aspects of daily life 141 142 References edit a b c China s social credit score untangling myth from reality Merics merics org 11 February 2022 Retrieved 10 August 2022 Stevenson Alexandra Mozur Paul 22 September 2019 China Scores Businesses and Low Grades Could Be a Trade War Weapon The New York Times ISSN 0362 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Zhong Yuhao Summer 2019 Rethinking the Social Credit System A Long Road to Establishing Trust in Chinese Society PDF Symposium on Applications of Contextual Integrity 28 29 via Privaci info a b c d e f g h China s Social Credit System Speculation vs Reality The Diplomat Archived from the original on 30 March 2021 What is China s social credit system and why is it controversial South China Morning Post 9 August 2020 Retrieved 8 December 2020 国务院关于印发社会信用体系建设规划纲要 2014 2020年 的通知 Central Government of China in Chinese China Retrieved 10 November 2019 a b c d e f Meissner Mirjam 24 May 2017 China s Social Credit System A big data enabled approach to market regulation with broad implications for doing business in China PDF www merics org Archived from the original PDF on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 11 July 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Drinhausen Katja Brussee Vincent 3 March 2021 China s Social Credit System in 2021 From fragmentation towards integration Mercator Institute for China 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from buying travel tickets MIT Technology Review Retrieved 11 January 2020 Is China s social credit system as Orwellian as it sounds MIT Technology Review Retrieved 11 January 2020 Opinion The West may be wrong about China s social credit system The Washington Post People Don t Understand China s Social Credit and These Memes Are Proof 25 October 2021 Yu Cindy 13 June 2023 Mythbusting the social credit system The Spectator 80 of Russians Will Have State Gathered Digital Profiles by 2025 Official Says The Moscow Times 28 September 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2019 Chinese Style Social Credit System Is a Threat to Russia Deputy PM Says The Moscow Times 12 November 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2019 M Akimov Pravitelstvo ne planiruet sozdanie sistemy socialnogo rejtinga dlya grazhdan www mskagency ru in Russian 10 November 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2019 What s your score neweconomics org Williams Zoe 12 July 2018 Algorithms are taking over and woe betide anyone they class as a deadbeat The Guardian a b Uh oh Silicon Valley is building a Chinese style social credit system In China scoring Fast Company 26 August 2019 America Isn t Far Off From China s Social Credit Score Observer com 19 February 2018 China s social credit system coming towards America Weekly Blitz 1 June 2019 a b Venezuela is rolling out a new ID card manufactured in China that can track reward and punish citizens Business Insider Reuters Retrieved 22 August 2019 Chinese telecom giant helped Venezuela develop social credit system ABC News 16 November 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2019 China style social credit system comes to Venezuela with Homeland Cards Taiwan News 16 November 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2019 External links editOfficial website nbsp Portals nbsp Society nbsp China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social Credit System amp oldid 1219832198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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