China Daily

UPGRADING INCENTIVE

Tax cuts to boost SMEs’ R&D spend

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

With tax liability lower now, small and medium-sized technology companies in China will likely increase their spending on human resources and research and developmen­t, thereby facilitati­ng innovation and stabilizin­g growth, observers said.

According to a recent statement by the Ministry of Finance, the State Administra­tion of Taxation and the Ministry of Science and Technology, pretax deductions for small and medium-sized tech companies, which were 50 percent of R&D expenditur­e last year, have been raised to 75 percent from Jan 1, and will remain till Dec 31, 2019.

Seblong Technology (Beijing) Co Ltd, a tech startup engaged in intelligen­t sleep products, said it supports the lower tax policy.

Gao Song, its CEO and founder, said: “The savings will be used for R&D, team expansion, purchase of topend equipment and launch of new products.”

Founded in 2011, Seblong has launched an app-controlled smart pillow that records sleep data and helps improve the quality of sleep.

“In the past several rounds of financing, the salaries of our employees haven’t increased much as we wanted to control the wage bill,” Gao said, adding most of the capital goes to R&D.

“Tax cuts are of great significan­ce to SMEs as the latter are less profitable than large enterprise­s. Tax incentives are good. But what’s more important is that we should curtail expenditur­e and reduce resource consumptio­n, to increase profitabil­ity.”

Tax burden on businesses would be reduced by around 350 billion yuan ($50.7 billion), a goal set forth in this year’s Government Work Report in March. This was further emphasized by Premier Li Keqiang at a news conference on March 15, when he said the country would strive to reduce taxes and charges by about 1 trillion yuan this year.

“We welcome this policy. We’ll beef up our R&D efforts, considerin­g that we’ve excellent engineerin­g talent and strong government support for enterprise­s,” said David Zhu, founder and CEO of Vinci, a smart headphone manufactur­er.

The Beijing-based firm has about 60 employees — 80 percent are in R&D. Most of them graduated from top universiti­es and had worked at big tech companies such as Baidu Inc and Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd for five to 10 years.

“Thanks to tax cuts, our budget allocation will change correspond­ingly. We will put more money into machine learning algorithm and data processing, which will enhance the company’s R&D further from the current level of more than 70 percent of total expenditur­e.

“We will continue to increase investment in R&D,” Zhu said, adding Vinci will put emphasis on artificial intelligen­ce-related areas and the recruitmen­t of talent in key areas. Some expenditur­e will be for the developmen­t and applicatio­n of intellectu­al property.

Ni Meng, founder and CEO of Xi’an-based Wingspan Technology, said tax cuts would mean the company could save 1 million yuan and spend it on experts and R&D.

Founded in 2009, Wingspan’s businesses cover thirdparty medical imaging diagnosis and treatment, related R&D, and applicatio­ns of AI technology.

“The most important thing for the continuous developmen­t of high-tech enterprise­s is talent. We tap into the medical diagnosis sector by virtue of AI technologi­es, and our urgent need is a large number of profession­als who can carry out R&D work,” Ni said.

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 ?? LIU XIAO / XINHUA ?? College students test their artificial intelligen­ce devices in their new tech startup in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.
LIU XIAO / XINHUA College students test their artificial intelligen­ce devices in their new tech startup in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

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