China Daily (Hong Kong)

Easing the pain of social security reform

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CHINA IS PREPARING to reform the system for collecting social insurance contributi­ons, a move that some fear could result in an increased burden on local businesses. Beijing News comments:

Under the existing system, employers pay a certain share of their employees’ social security contributi­ons together with the employees’ own contributi­ons, which are deducted directly from their wages, to the social security bureau.

However, a recent report revealed that only 24.1 percent of Chinese companies fully comply with their payment obligation­s to the social security fund. Up to 75.9 percent of companies do not make these payments based on the actual wages they pay, and some only make such contributi­ons based on minimum wages.

Although the contributi­ons required vary from city to city, the reform means companies will shoulder a heavier burden, and the money individual­s can take home will also decrease following the reform.

Under the new system, the power to collect the funds will be consolidat­ed in the taxation department to close loopholes enabling evasion and make collection­s more efficient. The new measure will come into effect on Sept 1 next year.

The move has caused some employees to worry

about losing their jobs, because the enterprise­s might choose to downsize their payroll to offset any increase in social security payments, as it will become more difficult for companies to lower or evade making social security payments when the tax bureau collects it.

And employers, mostly from private enterprise­s, fear that they will soon bid farewell to the 20 percent or even lower tax rate they have enjoyed for long because of local government’s supportive tax policies after the merging of the two taxation systems. Such concerns are understand­able.

Thus it is good to hear a response from the higher authoritie­s, as the State Council, China’s Cabinet, has declared that before the social security fee collection reform is carried out, the enterprise­s’ tax rate will remain unchanged, and it has urged local government­s to lower the social security fee rate to ensure the enterprise­s’ overall tax and fee burden will remain unchanged after the new collection system takes effect.

Hopefully, the State Council’s reassuring response can mark a good beginning to establish a constructi­ve consultati­ve mechanism on taxation policy and reform.

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