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Giấy phép số 4978/GP-TTĐT do Sở Thông tin và Truyền thông Hà Nội cấp ngày 14 tháng 10 năm 2019 / Giấy phép SĐ, BS GP ICP số 2107/GP-TTĐT do Sở TTTT Hà Nội cấp ngày 13/7/2022.
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Ministries and agencies report that Vietnam currently has 198 regulated business sectors and 4,603 business conditions. Under Conclusion No. 18, ministries and agencies are required to continue reviewing and cutting regulated business sectors by 30% (about 60 sectors) and to eliminate 100% of unnecessary business conditions.
The conclusion also sets requirements to reduce compliance burdens: 50% of the time and 50% of the costs associated with administrative procedures should be cut. In addition, ministries are instructed to implement no more than 30% of the total administrative procedures under their management.
Speaking at the meeting, Prime Minister Le Minh Hung ordered ministries and agencies to immediately implement the tasks in Conclusion No. 18 to complete them as soon as possible. The Prime Minister highlighted administrative reform, cutting business conditions and conditioned business sectors, and decentralizing the handling of administrative procedures.
Prime Minister Le Minh Hung said he would assign Deputy Prime Ministers to take direct responsibility. He also tasked the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of Home Affairs, and the Government Office to develop a concrete working schedule for each ministry and sector.
The Prime Minister said ministers must be directly involved and not wait until the end of Q2 2026. By April 20, ministries must submit to the Standing Government and the Government a plan to cut and reform administrative procedures, business conditions, and conditioned sectors under their management.
Separately, the Government Office and the Ministry of Justice are responsible for consolidating and reviewing the proposals, and presenting a submission for Government approval within April 2026.
Premium gym chains are entering a “golden era” that is ending or already in decline, as rising operating costs collide with shifting consumer preferences toward more flexible, community-based ways to exercise. Long-term memberships are shrinking, margins are pressured by higher rents and facility expenses, and competition from smaller, more personalized…