Business Scope of China Representative Office
The business scope of a Representative Office (RO) should be
clearly stated in the application document prepared by the applying
foreign enterprise. After approval by the relevant authority and
registration with the AIC, the business scope will be stated in the
Registration Certificate for the Representative Office (RO). A
Representative Office (RO) can only engage in business activities
which are within the business scope as set forth in the Registration
Certificate.
Normally, ROs can only engage in non-operational activities in
China, such as liaison, product promotion, market research and
technology exchange. However, if a bilateral treaty between China
and the home country of the foreign enterprise provides that
Representative Offices (RO) established by enterprises of both
countries should have the authority to engage in direct operational
activities, such provisions should prevail.
ROs will have the authority to engage in economic activities and
sign economic contracts which are necessary to maintain the
existence and function of the Representative Offices (RO). For
example, a Representative Office (RO) entered into a purchase
contract with a computer company, whereby the Representative Office
(RO) will purchase a computer for office use. This computer purchase
contract should be valid because the purpose of this contract is to
satisfy the basic needs of its operation.
The right to engage in activities to maintain its operations is an
intrinsic right of a RO. Such activities are not business
activities.
Examples include
engaging the services of Chinese personnel, renting permanent office
space, displaying the name of the office outside its premises, using
a company chop, importing personal and office goods, obtaining
telephone lines, opening a bank account in the name of the office,
obtaining resident visas and other permits for expatriate employees
and referring to itself as having an "office" in China.
Complying with Limitations on Activities
The apparent intention of limiting
representative offices to "non-direct business activities" is to
ensure that representative offices act on behalf of the
foreign-based companies they represent and not on their own behalf
as separate business entities. Thus contracts signed by the
representative office (other than those relating to its own
administration, such as its office lease) should be signed in the
name of its parent enterprise or one of its affiliates, not in the
name of the representative office itself. Such contracts should also
show an address outside of China for the relevant foreign party. Any
sale and subsequent billing and collection of money for technical,
consulting, inspection, or other services should similarly be
carried out by the parent enterprise or one of its affiliates, not
the representative office. Based on the regulations, representative
offices should not perform the functions of a "service centre".
Consequences of Exceeding the Limitation on
Activities
If an established representative office is
found to be "directly engaging in business activities", the
Registration Procedures provide for penalties including fines of up
to RMB20,000 and suspension of business activities. In practice,
actual fines and sanctions are somewhat discretionary and determined
on a case-by-case basis. It is possible that the representative
office may be allowed to remedy the situation without sanction or
that appropriate penalties will be determined on the basis of the
amount invested in such activities and/or income generated through
such business activities.
Introduction to China Representative Office
Representative Office Registration Procedures
Legal Status of Representative Office
Business Scope of Representative Office
Chief Representative
Taxation of Representative Offices
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