China Daily

Tax, fee cuts, spending to support 2019 fiscal policy

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Many more tax and fee cuts and stronger government spending are the two pillars supporting China’s proactive fiscal policy in 2019, focusing on improving the business environmen­t and boosting infrastruc­ture investment, Finance Minister Liu Kun said in an interview on Friday.

A larger amount of tax and fee reductions, compared with about 1.3 trillion yuan ($192.9 billion) in 2018, will be put in place this year, especially for manufactur­ing and small companies, Liu told Xinhua News Agency.

“No matter the total amount or as a share of the GDP, the tax and fee cuts last year were higher than any other country in the world, and they have effectivel­y lowered costs for the real economy,” Liu said.

The finance ministry is working with other government department­s on a plan to reduce the social security premium rate, and it will further ease burdens on

enterprise­s. Reforms to the valueadded tax will also be improved, he said.

“Moderately” expanding fiscal spending is another important measure to support infrastruc­ture constructi­on and stabilize economic growth, Liu said.

Local government­s are encouraged to raise more funds through special bonds and accelerate the bond issuance process.

“Any delay of bond issuance that hinders constructi­on of major projects is absolutely not allowed,” he said.

Bond issuance will start in January as a result of top policymake­rs approving the annual quota of 1.39 trillion yuan earlier than usual, with 810 billion yuan of the quota allotted for special-purpose bonds such as those used for constructi­on, according to the Ministry of Finance.

The fiscal policy package, with tax cuts as the core, was stronger than expected, said Shen Jianguang, chief economist at JD Finance.

“As an important part of the countercyc­lical adjustment­s in the face of economic slowdown pressure, the moves could help to stabilize employment and improve structural reform,” Shen said.

Liu said, “It doesn’t mean crossing the bottom line of debt risk, but balancing growth stabilizat­ion with risk prevention. The preconditi­on is to improve management of the government debt.”

The ministry also will tighten regulation of the budget performanc­e evaluation system. Some unnecessar­y spending should be avoided, and the government needs to “tighten its belt”, Liu said. He pledged to reduce general government spending by more than 5 percent this year.

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