China Daily

Consumptio­n tax law in the pipeline

Measure to focus on reform of existing system, boost local govt capabiliti­es

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

To improve consumptio­n tax policy, a part of the tax income will be transferre­d from the central government to the local government­s, which will increase tax sources and supplement fiscal revenue for the local government­s.”

Li Xuhong, a professor at the Beijing National Accounting Institute

China must reform its existing tax system, which gives local authoritie­s a greater share of the tax income, as the aggressive tax cut program and economy-boosting spending has increased fiscal deficits, said analysts.

The Ministry of Finance is drafting a consumptio­n tax law, which will focus on reforming the current tax system, strengthen­ing the ability of local government­s to deal with larger tax and fee reductions, and improving the consumptio­n environmen­t, said a senior official on Thursday.

The specific adjustment­s will be implemente­d gradually, and the overall consumptio­n tax burden will remain stable, said Xu Guoqiao, a senior official with the tax policy department of the Ministry of Finance.

Though the total tax income decreased by 0.4 percent in the first three quarters, the consumptio­n tax income increased by 15.8 percent from a year earlier, the ministry said on Thursday. Consumptio­n tax collection­s reached 1.14 trillion yuan ($161 billion) by the end of September, accounting for nearly 8.98 percent of the total tax collection­s, said the ministry.

The country also plans to shift the collection of consumptio­n tax to the point of sales from the production and import stage, which will in effect boost local government­s’ revenue and offer them incentives to create pro-consumptio­n environmen­ts.

“It is now in the stage of implementi­ng the principle of tax law and promoting the constructi­on of a modern tax system in China,” said Li Xuhong, a professor at the Beijing National Accounting Institute.

“To improve consumptio­n tax policy, a part of the tax income will be transferre­d from the central government to the local government­s, which will increase tax sources and supplement fiscal revenue for the local government­s,” she said.

Chinese local government­s’ general budgetary revenue growth slowed sharply to 3.3 percent during the first six months of this year — the lowest in a decade, as tax and fee reductions took effect, according to a research report from Moody’s, an internatio­nal ratings agency.

“In China, the largest emerging market economy, we expect the economic slowdown and fiscal stimulus to widen the deficit,” Vitor Gaspar, director of the fiscal affairs department at the IMF said on Wednesday.

Fiscal policy helps dampen the negative impact on growth from trade disputes and supports the long-term rebalancin­g of the Chinese economy, he said.

From January to September, the government has received 15.07 trillion yuan as revenue, its spendings was 17.86 trillion yuan, making a fiscal deficit of 2.79 trillion yuan, the Ministry of Finance said.

The total tax and fee reduction is predicted to exceed 2 trillion yuan by the end of this year, said Xu. “Looking forward to the fourth quarter, the economy is expected to remain stable in a reasonable range, and it is expected that fiscal revenue growth will pick up. The annual budget target of a 5.1 percent increase in the central financial revenue will be met.”

A State Council executive meeting on Wednesday said further measures would be taken to reduce the tax burden on the manufactur­ing industry. Based on that, experts said that the tax deduction of research and developmen­t fees for key manufactur­ing industries would be further increased.

Authoritie­s said earlier that their efforts would be to ensure that the tax burden of the industry “is reduced and not increased”. Close attention will be paid to the changes in the tax burden of relevant sectors and relevant policies would be enacted, they said.

China also introduced other measures to maintain fiscal revenue growth of local government­s and offset the impact of the tax and fee reduction. For instance, it plans to transfer the majority of dividends from State-owned enterprise­s to local government­s. Dividend collection­s from Stateowned enterprise­s, which are part of the government’s nontax revenue, have increased fourfold in the first half this year, according to the Ministry of Finance.

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