China Daily (Hong Kong)

Large-scale tax cuts best way to support non-public sector

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THE STATE ADMINISTRA­TION OF TAXATION organized a meeting with representa­tives of 12 private enterprise­s in Beijing last week to solicit their suggestion­s on how to ease their tax and fee burdens. Wang Jun, head of the tax administra­tion, pledged to carefully study the entreprene­urs’ suggestion­s and provide them with better services and more supportive policies. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

It is good to see the taxation authority showing its earnestnes­s in striving to better serve privatelyo­wned businesses.

Reducing the tax burden on private enterprise­s can provide them with more direct support than easing their difficulti­es in obtaining financing. It only needs the government’s decision to cut the tax and administra­tive fees they have to pay, while the State-run banks have to be persuaded to lend to private companies because they prefer to lend to State-owned companies as they are more confident of their repayment capabiliti­es.

But while it has been a well-defined goal of government work in recent years to reduce the tax burden on private enterprise­s, the tax revenue has still grown substantia­lly.

The fast increase of government revenue is partially caused by the more stringent efforts to prevent tax evasion. But there still remains great room for further tax reduction.

The reduction of tax and fees for private enterprise­s should be a long-term government task, rather

than a storm-style campaign. The taxation department­s need to carry out bigger tax cuts and more effective measures particular­ly for some small and micro-sized businesses, which face mounting pressures.

China’s State-owned enterprise­s are strong and will continue to pay tax. The reduction of tax revenues from private enterprise­s after the implementa­tion of large-scale tax reductions will not adversely affect the State even if it reduces the total amount of taxes within a certain period of time.

In particular, small and micro-sized businesses should be tax exempt in a bid to help some of them overcome the difficulti­es they face in the current challengin­g environmen­t.

Against this backdrop, it is necessary for the State Administra­tion of Taxation to adjust the targets and work performanc­e evaluation indexes of local taxation department­s, because some grassroots taxation officials tend to exhaust all means to over-fulfill their quota, spurred by the old idiom of the more the better.

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