China Daily Global Edition (USA)

NDRC moots research on new tax

Sharing economy may benefit from lower operating costs, optimal use of resources

- By MASI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China plans to impose appropriat­e taxes to regulate the sharing economy sector, the country’s top economic planner said in a draft proposal on Tuesday.

The draft guideline, published by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission on its official website, called for accelerate­d research on new tax regulation­s for the rapidly growing sharing economy sector.

“More effort is needed to encourage enterprise­s that deal in the sharing economy to dock with local tax authoritie­s, and speed up the integratio­n of online and offline (tax) management policies,” the draft said.

According to the document, which is open for public scrutiny, local government­s will also buy more sharing economy products and services, such as ride-sharing, to reduce operating costs and maximize the use of resources.

The guideline is part of China’s broad efforts to boost and regulate the country’s sharing economy sector, which has seen an explosive growth in recent years.

In 2016, the transactio­n volume of China’s sharing economy reached 3.45 trillion yuan ($503 billion), marking a 103 percent year-on-year growth, a report said on Tuesday.

The report, released by the Sharing Economy Research Center of the State Informatio­n Center, shows China’s sharing economy has played a significan­t role in generating innovation-driven economic growth, and creating new employment opportunit­ies

In 2016, 600 million people were involved in China’s sharingeco­nomy, upby 100 million from the same period in 2015. Employees working on the sharing economy platforms numbered 5.85 million, surging by 850,000 year-on-year. Among them, the number of service providers increased by 10 million to 60 million.

Yu Fengxia, director of the Informatio­n Institute of the State Informatio­n Center, said: “China has been swept by the idea of a sharing economy. Agrowing number of people realize the new business model and are willing to be part of it.”

Also, thanks to strong policy support, the enterprise­s that thrive on the sharing economy model are maturing, and investors are upbeat about the sector, making it one of the most popular destinatio­ns for investment­s, she added.

The report predicts that in the next few years, the annual growth rate for China’s sharing economy will remain at roughly 40 percent, accounting for more than 10 percent of the nation’s GDP by 2020.

Chen Chi, CEO of the homerental site Xiaozhu.com, said that the era of apartment sharing had come.

He said: “The government has carried out favorable policies, and the market is evolving rapidly. We will grasp this opportunit­y, create more user-friendly experience­s, and provide better services for consumers.”

Founded in 2012, Beijingbas­ed Xiaozhu.com is similar to the US-based Airbnb: It enables users to book spare rooms or apartments of others through a peer-to-peer model. Zheng Yiran contribute­d to the story.

China has been swept by the idea of a sharing economy.”

Yu Fengxia, director of the Informatio­n Institute of the State Informatio­n Center

 ?? KONG GE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Two girls get ready to ride Ofo bicycles in Tianjin.
KONG GE / FOR CHINA DAILY Two girls get ready to ride Ofo bicycles in Tianjin.

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