China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Ease heavy tax burden to upgrade manufactur­ing

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MORE THAN 20 DEPARTMENT­Sof the State Council, China’s cabinet, are pressing ahead with the government’s “1+X” initiative. The “1” stands for “Made in China 2025”, a road map to enhance the country’s manufactur­ing power, and “X” means guidelines for sectors including smart manufactur­ing and innovation of high-end equipment. But for the initiative to work extra efforts have to be made to lower tax burden on enterprise­s, Beijing Youth Daily commented on Thursday:

First proposed by Premier Li Keqiang in his government work report in 2015, the “Made in China 2025” guideline was a result of forward-thinking and proactive reading of the changing tides of globalizat­ion. Since the 1990s the United States has witnessed an exodus of domestic manufactur­ers to emerging markets, but it was hit hard by the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009 partly due to its weakened manufactur­ing.

That, to some extent, explains why Donald Trump, the newUS president, won unparallel­ed support from the working class during last year’s presidenti­al election. A staple of his campaign efforts was convincing blue-collar workers that he would raise their pay and create more jobs by bringing US manufactur­ers back from overseas markets.

China can learn a lesson or two from the US’ misjudgmen­t and Trump’s shortsight­edness. The US president did offer to reduce the tax burden and lessen the supervisio­n on enterprise­s at home, but simply focusing on better employment instead of technologi­cal innovation will probably get the country’s manufactur­ing nowhere.

Upgrading its manufactur­ing industry is exactly what China expects from the “1+X” initiative, which attaches great importance to areas such as smart and green manufactur­ing, innovation of high-end equipment, and new material. The industrial innovation driven by the Internet Plus, mass entreprene­urship and innovation, and “Made in China 2025”, as Li foresaw, has the potential to usher in a “newindustr­ial revolution”. That highlights the need to ease the heavy tax burden on Chinese manufactur­ers, which has hampered the industrial transforma­tion.

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