New regulations went into effect at the start of this year. Under a plan published by China's State Council last year, government regulators will allow private companies to enter the salt market.
Existing wholesalers will be allowed to operate outside their previously designated areas, run marketing campaigns and introduce "modern ways of distribution."
Government planners will retain supervision over retail pricing to "prevent abnormal fluctuations," but prices will otherwise be set by the market, according to the State Council.
State media reported in 2013 that Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group's online marketplace, Taobao, cracked down on unauthorised salt vendors.
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But China has pledged in recent years to open up its economy to more private and foreign competition and make government-run companies more competitive. Its handling of salt, a tiny segment of the economy compared to other state-dominated industries, could be a test of those promises.
But Zou Jialai, a Shanghai lawyer who has represented private companies in salt-related cases, cautioned against trumpeting an end to the monopoly. Zou said he expects state-owned firms to continue to control how salt is sold here, but with more competition than before.
"I want to say that it is not reform; it is just an improvement," Zou said. "The monopoly is still on, and it is improper.
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