China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tax, cost cuts sought to help manufactur­ers

- By LI XIANG in Beijing and HUMEIDONG in Fuzhou

Economists called on the government on Tuesday to accelerate economic reforms, including tax and cost cuts to ease the burden on manufactur­ers, after a Chinese tycoon raised the issue.

Auto glass tycoon Cao Dewang told China Business News that production costs in the United States are lower than those in China. This was echoed by the business community, which is concerned about the Chinese manufactur­ing sector not only losing out to some Southeast Asian countries, but also to developed economies such as the US.

They fear such worries would drive more Chinese manufactur­ers to move their production sites outside of China.

Qu Tianshi, an economist at ANZ Group, said the government should introduce more favorable policies to facilitate the upgrade of the Chinese manufactur­ing sector and to boost its overall competitiv­eness.

“There is room at the central government level to reduce taxes next year, since the balance sheet of the Chinese central government is relatively sound,” Qu said.

China’s top leaders at the annual Central Economic Work Conference last week decided that boosting the real economy and raising industrial competitiv­eness will bekey priorities of economic policies next year.

“We already sensed the signal from the meeting that the top leadership will continue the corporate cost reduction and improvemen­t of the business environmen­t in the coming year,” Qu added.

Cao, chairman of auto glass manufactur­er Fuyao Group, said the overall tax cost for manufactur­ers in China is 35 percent higher than in the US.

Cao invested $600 million to build a glass manufactur­ing plant in the US that began operating in October. The

plant has created more than 2,500 jobs in the US, according to the company.

The Chinese tycoon said that despite higher labor costs, the profit margin for his company’s US plant could be 10 percent higher than what it would be in China.

A senior executive at Fuyao Group who declined to be named told China Daily on Tuesday that the US investment is part of the company’s going-global strategy, and Cao’s comments did not mean that the company intended to leave the home market.

Nonetheles­s, economists said that the Chinese manufactur­ing sector is facing a challengin­g time as rising labor costs, surging property prices and a heavy tax burden at home have eaten into their profit margins.

Xu Hongcai, an economist at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said that China should pay greater attention to outflows of industrial capital and come up with more effective policies to make the domestic market more business-friendly.

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