China Daily

Fiscal focus to be on sci-tech, consumptio­n

Minister: Combinatio­n of policy tools will be used to expand expenditur­e

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China will further optimize its fiscal policies, including tax policies, to help further expand and upgrade consumptio­n, and also increase and restructur­e fiscal support for scientific and technologi­cal research and innovation­s, Minister of Finance Lan Fo’an said in an interview with People’s Daily published on Thursday.

Lan also said China will strengthen the overall planning of fiscal resources and use a combinatio­n of fiscal policy tools, including Treasury bonds, local government special-purpose bonds, and preferenti­al treatment in taxes, fees and subsidies, to moderately expand the scale of fiscal expenditur­e this year.

Experts forecast new policy measures are likely to be rolled out in this regard. They further said this will eventually help stabilize economic growth and promote the developmen­t of a modern industrial system, thereby promoting high-quality developmen­t and strengthen­ing the Chinese modernizat­ion drive.

Lan said in the interview that China will maintain an “appropriat­e level” of higher fiscal expenditur­e this year to send positive signals to industry and markets. While maintainin­g stability of the overall government debt ratio, the country will continue to issue an appropriat­e amount of local government specialpur­pose bonds, and strengthen the management of the funds raised, thereby helping local government­s to strengthen weak links in key areas and improve investment efficiency.

Lan also said China will further optimize and adjust preferenti­al policies related to taxes and fees to provide key support for scientific and technologi­cal research, innovation­s and the developmen­t of the manufactur­ing sector. It will also standardiz­e nontax fiscal revenue collection, and resolutely prevent arbitrary charges and fines.

The minister said the country will focus on residents’ needs related to consumptio­n upgrade to study new fiscal and tax policy measures that can improve consumptio­n capacity, optimize consumptio­n environmen­t and promote new types of consumptio­n.

Besides, China will increase fiscal expenditur­e while improving the expenditur­e structure in the fields of science and technology, including leaning toward basic research, scitech applicatio­ns and national strategic sci-tech projects, to fully support the pursuit of breakthrou­ghs in core technologi­es and key areas via an improved national support system.

Wang Qing, chief macroecono­mic analyst at Golden Credit Rating Internatio­nal, said that China’s moderate inflation levels provide room for it to strengthen policy support to consumptio­n.

“Consumptio­n promotion will be key for China to expand domestic demand this year, and measures like tax reductions, fee cuts and largerscal­e consumptio­n subsidies will likely be implemente­d, especially in key consumptio­n sectors like new energy vehicles, home appliances, furniture, and culture and tourism,” Wang said.

“The central government can increase transfer payments to less privileged regions and weak areas to provide targeted consumptio­n support to certain regions.”

He said he expects increased fiscal support will be provided to basic research as well as research in scitech applicatio­ns and key national sci-tech tasks. Preferenti­al tax and fee treatment will tilt toward scitech innovation­s, and the country may also provide new fiscal subsidies to science and technology enterprise­s, he said.

Chang Haizhong, executive director of corporates at Fitch Bohua, a credit ratings agency, said he expects this year’s fiscal policies to further encourage and guide expansion and upgrade of consumptio­n in fields like smart homes, entertainm­ent and tourism, through policy tools like fiscal subsidies, tax incentives and government procuremen­t.

The current tourism boom in Harbin of Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng province is the best example of fostering new types of consumptio­n, he said.

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