Key facts
- Chinese cadres struggle with increased workloads and reduced tangible results.
- Beijing has called for easing burdens and curbing formalism on local officials.
- State-linked media identifies five symptoms of a 'busier-but-emptier' phenomenon.
- Officials find it difficult to adopt 'error tolerance' due to bureaucratic hurdles.
Despite repeated directives from Beijing to alleviate the workload on local officials and reduce formalism, many cadres in China are reportedly caught in a cycle of working harder while achieving fewer tangible results. This 'busier-but-emptier' phenomenon was detailed in a report by Banyuetan, a magazine affiliated with the state news agency Xinhua. The report outlined five symptoms of this issue, suggesting that despite central government calls for 'error tolerance,' local officials are still struggling to implement these changes effectively. The persistent bureaucratic hurdles and a fear of making mistakes seem to hinder progress and innovation at the local level.
