Immediately after Standing Committee member Tran Cam Tu signed and issued Conclusion No. 134-KL/TW dated March 28, 2025, of the Politburo and the Secretariat on the "Project to reorganize the inspection agency system to be streamlined, strong, efficient, effective, and effective," many people expressed confidence and optimism that inspection and auditing work would become stronger and more effective.
In Conclusion No. 134-KL/TW, the Politburo and the Secretariat agreed on the principle of streamlining the organizational structure of the inspection system. Except for some specific areas where the existing inspection organization will be maintained, the inspection system will essentially be organized into two levels: the Government Inspectorate at the central level and provincial inspectorates at the local level. Furthermore, the assignment of specialized inspection functions to certain agencies under the current Inspection Law will be terminated. This is a significant change aimed at addressing the shortcomings and limitations in the current organization and operation of inspections. While reducing the cumbersome structure, this will not compromise the functions and tasks of inspection activities. In particular, it will strongly promote the responsibility of state management agencies in inspection, making inspection work more frequent, substantive, and effective.
According to some experts, over the years there has been confusion between inspection and auditing activities by management agencies. In addition, the widespread delegation of specialized inspection functions has led to a "total inspection" phenomenon that negatively impacts the normal operations of units, organizations, and individuals.
From another perspective, conducting an inspection complicates matters, potentially leading to personnel losses and disrupting the normal development of the inspected unit. Meanwhile, inspection is an indispensable activity in the management cycle, used to monitor how work is being performed, thereby encouraging, reminding, or guiding implementation to ensure it is done correctly and effectively. Focusing on inspection helps to detect and address shortcomings promptly, allowing for appropriate adjustments, identifying difficulties and obstacles in the implementation process for remediation, and preventing these issues from escalating. Effective inspection reduces pressure on the auditing process and minimizes undesirable problems.
Thus, streamlining the organizational structure of inspection does not weaken this activity, but still maintains the initiative of the units if they proactively conduct inspections.
Following the issuance of Conclusion No. 134-KL/TW by the Politburo and the Secretariat, the National Assembly will soon amend the Law on Inspection to realize the set goals and tasks. Public opinion is eagerly awaiting the implementation of new regulations on inspection work to eliminate the cumbersome, multi-layered, and multi-faceted nature of the inspection system, as well as the overlapping, duplication, and interference that have long been discussed, which have not ensured independence and objectivity in the performance of official duties in the field of inspection.
Thai Minh
Source: https://baothanhhoa.vn/thu-gon-dau-moi-co-quan-thanh-tra-243988.htm







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