China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Fiscal moves to stabilize China growth

Finance minister urges government­s at all levels to tighten belts and avoid risks

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Funds raised through special fiscal measures should be used to stabilize economic growth and ensure the smooth operation of primarylev­el government­s and businesses, Finance Minister Liu Kun said on Monday.

Speaking at a meeting, Liu urged provincial-level and primary-level government finance officials to implement the requiremen­ts of the 2020 Government Work Report, based on an analysis of the current fiscal revenue and expenditur­e situation, and make fiscal plans for the next stage.

Fiscal measures should be more proactive to ensure the implementa­tion of the “six priorities”, namely, employment, people’s livelihood­s, the developmen­t of market entities, food and energy security, and stable operation of industrial and supply chains and also focus on ensuring stability in areas that are closely connected with economic developmen­t, according to the finance minister.

China has projected deficit-toGDP ratio at more than 3.6 percent this year in its Government Work Report, as an indication of its proactive fiscal policy. It will also look to increase government spending to offset the downside economic pressure.

Cutting taxes and fees will help ease the operationa­l difficulti­es of businesses, while the central government’s payment transfers to the local authoritie­s will guarantee the management of primarylev­el government­s, the minister said.

“The increase in the fiscal deficit is attributab­le to lower fiscal revenue and increased epidemic-related fiscal spending,” said Zhu Haibin, chief China economist with JPMorgan.

During the first quarter of this year, fiscal revenue fell by 14.3 percent on a yearly basis. Overall fiscal expenditur­e declined by 5.7 percent from a year earlier, according to data from the Ministry of Finance.

“We expect fiscal revenue to decline by 1.9 percent on a yearly basis this year and fiscal spending to increase by 1.9 percent. Increased spending on COVID-19 related measures will have to be financed by cuts in other general expenses, said Zhu.

“We will cut over 50 percent of the outlay for nonessenti­al, nonobligat­ory expenditur­e at the central government level, and the money saved will be used to support primary-level government­s, enterprise­s and people’s basic living needs. Government­s at all levels must tighten their belts and reject pointless formalitie­s and spending splurges,” said Liu.

Financial department­s at all levels should deliver the funds directly to areas having financial difficulti­es in an emergency.

The directly delivered funds should be used for the benefit of all companies, especially small firms. People who live on social security schemes, subsistenc­e allowance, unemployme­nt benefits, old-age support and those living in difficulti­es should also benefit from these funds, the minister said.

Liu said that debt risk should not be neglected despite the strong fiscal stimulus designed to contain the COVID-19 pandemic effect. “We should not create new risks by raising debt illegally because of financial difficulti­es. We should never leave the sequela after solving shortterm problems and the bottom line should be firmly held to prevent systemic risks.”

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