Shanghai Daily

Shanghai to help businesses slash cost burden by US$7.85b 50b

- Huang Yixuan MACRO-ECONOMY

SHANGHAI will help companies and businesses to reduce their cost burden by 50 billion yuan (US$7.85 billion) in 2018 with a series of policies and measures.

“In 2018, we will stick to pushing forward the supply-side reforms and focus on streamlini­ng administra­tion and lightening burden on companies to improve the business environmen­t and vitalize the market in Shanghai,” said Ma Chunlei, director of the Shanghai Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

To meet the 50-billion-yuan target, Shanghai has implemente­d 18 policy measures in 9 areas to slash cost on businesses.

The measures will help cut taxes, lower the ceiling of imposed government funds, lessen charges, reduce costs of labor, energy, financing, and institutio­nal transactio­ns as well as encourage regional pilot programs.

One of the measures will help businesses qualify as “small-scale VAT taxpayers” and pay only a 3-percent VAT because the threshold for general value-added tax payers including industrial and business enterprise­s has been raised from 500,000 yuan and 800,000 yuan respective­ly to 5 million yuan from May 1.

“By now, 368 businesses have applied for the registrati­on” to become smallscale VAT taxpayers, said Li Ming, chief auditor of the Shanghai Bureau of Taxation. “The applicatio­ns can be accepted until the end of the year.”

Also, businesses will now have to pay only twice the amount of the average wage for insurance for the disabled, down from three times.

Shanghai has also cut fees for city road repairs, land use for foreign-funded companies, registrati­on for drugs and medical equipment, and testing charges for special equipment.

Meanwhile, costs of institutio­nal transactio­ns are reduced in tandem with deepening reform of the administra­tive approval system. The city has implemente­d measures to further promote the pilot reform in separating operating permits and business licenses, optimizing administra­tive approval processes, and promoting the “Internet Plus Government Services” to streamline administra­tion and delegate power to lower levels.

In 2017, Shanghai issued 15 policies in six areas and cut over 53 billion yuan in line with deepening supply-side structural reform.

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