In spite of the various legislative measures taken by the                      Chinese Government to improve construction quality and procedures                      related to government project bidding and tendering, there                      is still significant room for improvement. 
While China has agreed to many WTO provisions that will benefit                      the construction and real estate industries, few industry-specific                      measures are on the agenda to which would cause an immediate                      improvement in China's construction sector. 
New tendering and bidding regulations have not been widely                      adopted and lack enforcement power. Many organizations are                      resisting the implementation of the new tendering and bidding                      regulations, and as a result, corruption remains a significant                      problem due to the continued lack of transparency in the current                      tendering and bidding procedures. 
Foreign contractors face severe partnering and bidding restrictions.                      They are hindered by numerous obscure or unpublished restrictions                      and procedures that result in costly delays. 
Many Chinese contractors routinely subcontract entire projects                      to other contractors without notifying project owners or representatives.                      Communication and contract problems ensue, and situations                      where the contractor actually doing the work has insufficient                      knowledge of the project requirements, or lacks the compensation                      needed to perform the work in a professional manner.