China Daily

Customs duties crucial for openness

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The implementa­tion of the law on customs duties is crucial for advancing high-level internatio­nal openness, and fostering a marketdriv­en and globally oriented business environmen­t in China, said the country’s top legislatur­e.

Chinese lawmakers on Friday voted to adopt a law on customs duties to promote high-level opening-up.

The law, which was passed at a session of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the national legislatur­e, will take effect on Dec 1. It maintains the basic stability of the existing tariff system, with the overall tax burden remaining unchanged.

Customs duties are taxes levied by customs on goods and items entering or leaving a country at the import and export stages, according to the General Administra­tion of Customs.

The collection of customs duties is related to national sovereignt­y and interests, serving as a significan­t source of fiscal revenue and an important tool for implementi­ng macroecono­mic control and trade and industrial policies, said the GAC.

In response to media queries, the NPC Standing Committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission said that this law can effectivel­y respond to changes in domestic and internatio­nal situations. It is necessary to improve the tariff system while enhancing its role as a regulator of domestic and internatio­nal dual circulatio­ns, and to enrich legal response measures.

As the reform to facilitate customs clearance continues to deepen and align with internatio­nal highstanda­rd economic and trade rules, it is imperative to elevate mature experience­s and practices in tariff collection management to the level of legal systems, said the commission in a statement.

Chinese customs authoritie­s saw their tax revenue amount to 2.21 trillion yuan ($305 billion) in 2023, statistics from the GAC showed.

The statement released by the NPC Standing Committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission said this law is able to coordinate developmen­t and security, enriching tariff response measures.

While maintainin­g existing tariff measures such as anti-dumping, countervai­ling and safeguard measures, and imposing retaliator­y tariffs, additional provisions will be made, said the commission.

These provisions allow for reciprocal measures against countries and regions that fail to fulfill their obligation­s under the most-favored-nation treatment or tariff preference clauses of internatio­nal treaties or agreements to which China is a signatory or participan­t, according to the statement.

Eager to further open up its economy and promote internatio­nal trade cooperatio­n, China implemente­d provisiona­l import tariff rates lower than the most-favorednat­ion rates on 1,010 items on Jan 1, according to informatio­n released by the Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council.

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