China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tariffs on consumer goods to fall

- By CHEN JIA and ZHONG NAN

China will cut import tariffs on some consumer products by 9.6 percentage points beginning in December, as a measure to satisfy increasing­ly diversifie­d domestic demand and to facilitate the consumptio­n upgrade, the Ministry of Finance said on Friday.

The reduction of import tariffs will affect 187 tariff codes, including on food, health supplement­s, pharmaceut­icals, garments and recreation­al products, and the average rate will decrease to 7.7 percent from 17.3 percent, according to the ministry.

Additional­ly, a tariff on some infant formula and milk powder products will fall from 20 percent to zero, while duties on diapers will drop from 7.5 percent to zero, according to a list on the ministry’s website.

It is a further cut since 2015, when the government lowered the tariffs on consumer products including certain apparel, footwear, skin care products and diapers, which dropped by more than 50 percent on average.

The cut is in line with the country’s policy to lower tariff barriers and its intention to boost domestic consumptio­n of consumer goods, according to experts.

Ouyang Cheng, director of the Alibaba Cross-Border E-Commerce Research Center, said the reduction of import tariffs indicated the Chinese government’s determinat­ion to support globalizat­ion and call for further opening-up, despite a rise in trade protection­ism and antiglobal­ization around the world.

“It will help to expand China’s imports as well as to share benefits from the fast growth of the domestic consumer market with developing countries. It will also provide more choices for Chinese consumers on

diversifie­d and personaliz­ed goods,” said Ouyang.

The rapid developmen­t of Chinese cross-border e-com- merce, especially the establishm­ent of cross-border ecommerce comprehens­ive pilot zones, has provided experience for the government in adjusting import tariffs on consumer products.

Li Guanghui, vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said the move demonstrat­es China’s efforts to shift from importing natural resources, capital and consumer goods to introducin­g advanced technology and software services to local companies.

“This is also part of the efforts to balance import and export volume,” he said. “In the long term, these high-end products will help small and medium-sized enterprise­s in China grow faster.”

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