China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Companies offered further tax benefits

- By CHEN JIA and WANG YANFEI in Beijing

China continues to welcome foreign investment through a temporary exemption of the withholdin­g tax on profits that are reinvested in the country, the Finance Ministry said in a statement released on its website on Thursday.

The move will help retain foreign investment and stabilize cross-border capital flows, analysts said.

The measure aims to encourage sustainabl­e and long-term foreign investment in China and improve the quality of the business environmen­t for foreign companies, the statement said.

The Ministry of Finance said more measures to encourage foreign enterprise­s to reinvest their profits in China and avoid drastic capital outflow fluctuatio­ns will be released in the coming months.

China levies its withholdin­g tax at a rate of 10 percent on foreign firms’ earnings. However, that withholdin­g tax can be exempted if that profit is

put into qualified direct equity investment­s, including stocks.

The statement said that foreign investors who get the tax exemption must meet certain conditions. Their direct investment should support industries that the country encourages and the investment must be transferre­d directly into the companies receiving the investment.

The tax exemption will be retroactiv­e from the beginning of this year, meaning foreign investors who have paid the tax can get a refund.

Liu Shangxi, head of the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences, told China Daily that the new measure will help to stabilize foreign investment and reduce potential fluctuatio­ns of cross-border capital flows due to uncertaint­ies in global economic growth.

The country is expected to continue to advance tax reform next year, including a further reduction of valueadded tax and cuts in government administra­tive fees, with a view to lowering enterprise­s’ operationa­l costs while improving their profits, according to Liu.

Ma Jun, deputy director of the National Academy of Economic Strategy under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said it will partially ease impacts on China from the recent US tax overhaul that has just been signed into law by US President Donald Trump, which reduces corporate tax to attract global investment into the US market.

“Enterprise­s that have large cross-border capital flows will be more affected, and the policy is likely to be readjusted according to changes in the global tax environmen­t,” he said.

Liu Yi, a professor at the School of Economics at Peking University, said, “It is not hoped that there will be a wave of tax reduction competitio­n around the world motivated by the US tax cut program, as that will reduce the fiscal capacity of other countries to improve their living standards.”

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