China Daily (Hong Kong)

State Council will boost support for cross-border deals

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

China will expand and improve existing policies on retail imports and exports via cross-border e-commerce to widen opening-up and unlock the potential of consumptio­n, the State Council’s executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang decided on Wednesday.

“Boosting cross-border e-commerce will help foster high-level opening-up and sustainabl­e growth of foreign trade, drive consumptio­n and create jobs,” Li said. “We need to take a holistic approach, exercising prudent yet accommodat­ive regulation to fully unleash the growth potential of crossborde­r e-commerce.”

Participan­ts in the meeting on Wednesday decided that the current policies on crossborde­r e-commerce retail imports will be continued in January.

No requiremen­ts of licensing, registrati­on or record-filing for first-time imports will apply to the retail imports through cross-border e-commerce platforms. Instead, these goods will receive more relaxed regulation as imports for personal use, the meeting decided.

Also, implementa­tion of this policy will be extended from 15 cities, including Hangzhou, to another 22 cities, including Beijing, that have just establishe­d comprehens­ive cross-border e-commerce pilot zones, according to the meeting.

Cross-border e-commerce businesses have enjoyed zero tariffs for goods on the retail imports list within a set quota and had their import valueadded tax and consumer tax collected at 70 percent of the statutory taxable amount. Such preferenti­al policies will be extended to another 63 tax categories of high-demand goods.

The limit on goods eligible for these preferenti­al policies will be raised from 2,000 yuan ($288) to 5,000 yuan per transactio­n and from 20,000 yuan to 26,000 yuan per head per year. This quota will be further adjusted as needed in light of increases in people’s income.

At the same time, export tax rebate policies will be further improved in line with internatio­nal practices to further boost exports via cross-border e-commerce.

“For a big importing and exporting nation like China, it is imperative to further open up, pursue greater diversity in the import and export mix, and vigorously attract foreign investment to promote balanced internatio­nal payments and steady economic developmen­t,” Li said.

Cross-border e-commerce businesses, online platforms and payment and logistics service providers must entirely fulfill their duties as required by law, meeting participan­ts said.

Product quality and safety inspection and risk prevention and control should be strengthen­ed for fair competitio­n in the marketplac­e and better protection of consumer rights and interests.

Between January and October 2018, retail imports through cross-border e-commerce reached 67.2 billion yuan, up 53.7 percent yearon-year, according to the General Administra­tion of Customs.

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