Business World

China to slash taxes, boost lending to shore up economy

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BEIJING — China will cut billions of dollars in taxes and fees, increase infrastruc­ture investment, and step up lending to small firms, Premier Li Keqiang said, as the government boosts stimulus to shore up an economy growing at its slowest pace in almost 30 years.

The government is targeting economic growth of 6.0% to 6.5% in 2019, Li said at Tuesday’s opening of the annual meeting of China’s parliament, less than the 6.6% gross domestic product (GDP) growth reported last year.

Sources told Reuters earlier this year that China would cut its 2019 growth target to 6% to 6.5% from the 2018 target of around 6.5% as demand at home and abroad ebbed, and a trade war with the US heightened economic risks.

Adopting a target range rather than a single growth figure gives policy makers room to manoeuvre as the world’s second-largest economy slows further.

GDP last year expanded at its slowest pace since 1990 due to the trade war and Beijing’s crackdown on financial risks, which raised corporate borrowing costs and hurt investment.

A longer-term campaign to curb polluting and low-value industries also slowed China’s vast manufactur­ing sector.

To help shore up the economy, China’s fiscal policy will become “more forceful,” Mr. Li said, with the government pencilling in cuts of nearly two trillion yuan ($298.31 billion) in taxes and fees for companies.

Value-added taxes will also be reduced to support the manufactur­ing, transport and constructi­on sectors.

With the economy losing steam, China’s top leaders are closely watching employment levels as factories could be forced to shed workers, despite a more resilient services sector.

China will cut the value-added tax (VAT) for the manufactur­ing sector to 13% from 16%, and the VAT for the transport and constructi­on sectors to 9% from 10%, Mr. Li said.

The government will also reduce the social security fees paid by companies to 16%, the premier said.

China will monitor more closely the job situation at exporting companies heavily exposed to the US market, Mr. Li said.

The government aims to create more than 11 million new urban jobs this year and keep the urban unemployme­nt rate within 4.5%, he added, unchanged from its 2018 goals. DEEPER TAX CUTS China last year cut taxes and fees worth 1.3 trillion yuan and allowed local government­s to issue 1.35 trillion yuan in special bonds to fund key projects.

The special bond issuance quota for local government­s has been set at 2.15 trillion yuan, the finance ministry said in a report on Tuesday, as China ramps up infrastruc­ture investment.

This year, the government has set a budget deficit target of 2.8% of GDP, up from last year’s 2.6%, reflecting lower tax revenue and higher government spending.

The government has also set a consumer inflation target of around 3%, Mr. Li said in his report at the opening of the National People’s Congress (NPC) on Tuesday, despite a recent softening in price rises to less than 2%, leaving space for Beijing to stimulate consumptio­n.

China has lowered reserve requiremen­ts for commercial lenders five times in the past year to spur loans to small and private companies — vital for growth and jobs.

The government will keep monetary policy neither too tight nor too loose, and will not resort to a flood of stimulus, Mr. Li said, with growth in M2 money supply and total social financing this year to be in line with nominal GDP growth.

China will use policy tools such as the reserve requiremen­t ratio and interest rates in a timely way, stepping up targeted reserve requiremen­t ratio cuts for smaller and medium-sized banks to support private and smaller firms, he said.

China aims to increase lending to small companies by large commercial banks by more than 30% this year, the premier said.

China will deepen interest rate reforms and lower real interest rate levels, he added, without specifying the type of interest rates. DELEVERAGI­NG China will control the pace and intensity of its structural deleveragi­ng efforts, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission (NDRC), the state planner, said in its report also released on Tuesday.

Shadow banking risks will be resolved in an orderly way, and China will steadily deal with local government debt risks, the NDRC said.

A balance will be struck between stabilizin­g economic growth and fending off risks, it said.

Of China’s 31 provinces, regions and municipali­ties, 24 have already lowered their growth targets for this year, especially export-driven coastal areas. In 2018, 17 provinces set lower targets.

China will continue to promote Sino-US trade negotiatio­ns, according to the government’s work report published on Tuesday, and is committed to safeguardi­ng economic globalizat­ion and free trade.

China is committed to mutually beneficial cooperatio­n, win-win developmen­t and settling trade disputes through discussion as equals, the report said.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Monday he thought the United States and China were “on the cusp” of a deal to end their trade war, adding to recent positive signs about negotiatio­ns from both sides of the Pacific.

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