China Daily

Lingang levies less taxing for companies

New measures helping businesses in emerging strategic industries.

- Shi Jing reports from Shanghai. Contact the writer at shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

More tasks related to systematic innovation have been assigned to the Lingang Special

Area.

The area was officially launched in August 2019 as part of the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, and it will now be used to facilitate the country’s dual-circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm.

During a November 2019 visit to Shanghai, President Xi Jinping said systematic innovation and institutio­nal improvemen­ts should be undertaken and strengthen­ed in Lingang to boost the area’s economic quality. In the long run, it should grow into an important hub linking onshore and offshore businesses, he added.

Zhou Hanmin, head of the Shanghai Institute of Socialism and a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, recently said more importance should be attached to the developmen­t of the Shanghai FTZ, especially Lingang.

That would allow experience­s of systematic innovation to be promoted in Shanghai and further applied to the Yangtze River Delta region. Only in this way can the FTZ truly grow into a pivot of the country’s higher level of opening-up.

Lingang has made many experiment­s with systematic innovation­s.

In August, the Shanghai Bureau of Finance announced that companies specializi­ng in the manufactur­e or research and developmen­t of integrated circuits, artificial intelligen­ce, biomedicin­e and civil aviation products in Lingang will pay a lower rate of income tax — 15 percent — for five years after their founding.

Companies generally pay 25 percent, but the rate is lowered to 15 percent for high-tech companies in designated industries on condition they were founded at least three years ago. In other words, startups are not eligible for the favorable rate.

However, that time limit does not apply in Lingang, where companies will be offered a favorable tax rate from the day they are establishe­d.

The first batch of 37 eligible companies was approved on Jan 25, providing savings of at least 20 million yuan ($3 million).

Confidence boost

Founded two years ago, Shanghai TuSimple Artificial Intelligen­ce is one of the favored companies.

Xue Jiancong, TuSimple’s general manager, said Lingang’s lower tax rate is especially helpful as it allows startups to invest more in human resources, technologi­cal innovation and upgrading equipment.

“Faced with the challenges brought about by the resurgence of COVID-19 in some parts of the world, market stability is still affected. Against that backdrop, companies’ confidence is boosted when tax is lowered. Not only can they concentrat­e more on technologi­cal innovation, but also maintain a positive outlook,” he said.

Those factors will enable TuSimple to develop the applicatio­n of pilotless logistics services during the next five years, according to Xue.

In addition to TuSimple, 14 other AI companies were granted the favorable tax rate in January. Meanwhile, 18 manufactur­ers of integrated circuits, three biomedicin­e makers and a civil aviation company have all been approved for the same tax break.

“The 15 percent rate is not inclusive, because only a limited number of companies are eligible, but it marks a major breakthrou­gh in China’s favorable tax policies,” said Gong Chun, deputy head of the Lingang tax bureau.

The preferenti­al tax rate is just one of many policy advances Lingang has made.

The framework plan of the Lingang Special Area, released by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, in August 2019 specified 78 specific tasks that Lingang must accomplish. They include areas such as finance, tax, human resources, fiscal policies, administra­tive regulation and the legal system.

Seventy-one of those tasks are currently in progress, according to a Feb 24 meeting of the area’s administra­tion.

While policies have been introduced to facilitate the developmen­t of domestic companies specializi­ng in emerging strategic industries, equal efforts have been made to attract internatio­nal industry leaders.

By the end of last year, 515 foreign-invested companies were registered in Lingang, with the total registrati­on capital amounting to more than $9 billion.

Tesla, the United States’ electric vehicle maker, has experience­d Lingang’s high level of efficiency.

The company’s gigafactor­y in Lingang — the industry giant’s first such facility outside the US — produced its first cars in early November 2019, just 16 months after Tesla signed agreements with the Shanghai government.

With total investment reaching 50 billion yuan, the factory is the largest foreign-invested manufactur­ing project in the eastern city.

That speedy introducti­on was made possible by many new measures. For example, when checking transporta­tion projects, only core materials and guarantees were required when they were reviewed.

To improve efficiency, supplement­ary documents were allowed to be submitted at a later date, said Han Li, deputy head of Lingang’s constructi­on and environmen­tal protection department.

“For the Tesla project, we accepted and gave the green light to the constructi­on stages when certain documents were not ready as long as the quality could be guaranteed.

“The only purpose was to reduce time losses due to the lack of materials or other administra­tive reasons,” she said.

Han said these experiment­al measures were not targeted solely at the Tesla project.

“The purpose is to seek experience­s that can be replicated and promoted across a wide area. In this way, Lingang can attract more large projects and nurture industries valued at over 100 billion yuan,” she said.

‘Testing site’

The “Tesla model” was promoted all over Lingang in March last year, allowing reform related to project examinatio­n and approval to be implemente­d throughout the area.

Meanwhile, industrial land can be used for multiple purposes in the area — the first time such a move has been allowed in Shanghai — and utilities such as water and electricit­y are provided free of charge to further reduce companies’ business costs. Zhu Zhisong, executive deputy director of the Lingang Special Area Administra­tion, set the goal for Lingang to be “a testing site for deepened opening-up”, while more reforms and breakthrou­ghs are on the way to make the area “an internatio­nally influentia­l special economic zone”, he said.

As the first facility of its kind in China, the Shanghai FTZ has witnessed many achievemen­ts. The negative list mechanism — a major tax breakthrou­gh to facilitate foreign investment — was first implemente­d when the FTZ was unveiled on Sept 29, 2013.

The mechanism was adopted nationwide in late 2018. While there were 190 restricted items on the 2013 list, there were just 30 on the latest version in July.

For Zhao Xiaolei, director of the FTZ research institute at Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, systematic innovation is not only the highlight of the Shanghai FTZ but, more important, its longterm mission. As China has adopted the dual-circulatio­n model, Lingang should formulate responsive measures by giving full play to its systematic advantages. Therefore, industry leaders in the area should play a key role.

Zhao urged high-tech companies with core technologi­es, brand recognitio­n and mature distributi­on channels to gather in Lingang, adding that they should follow the examples of internatio­nal leaders by ensuring leading technologi­es and strong supply chains.

“Opening-up is in Lingang’s genes. To fit into the new settings of the global economy and trade, Lingang should accelerate more systematic changes so China in general can better compete in the global market,” he said.

 ?? JI HAIXIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An aerial photo taken in July shows the central section of the Lingang Special Area, establishe­d in August 2019.
JI HAIXIN / FOR CHINA DAILY An aerial photo taken in July shows the central section of the Lingang Special Area, establishe­d in August 2019.
 ?? YU JIE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors watch a video about Lingang on an electronic screen in Shanghai.
YU JIE / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors watch a video about Lingang on an electronic screen in Shanghai.

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