China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Export tax rebates and easier imports in offing

Maintainin­g stability of industrial chain, currency moves on priority list

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will offer more export tax rebates to ease the current financial pressure on export-oriented companies, and open green channels for the import of vital manufactur­ing parts to maintain the stability of the industrial chain, government officials said on Thursday.

Export tax rebates refer to a critical trade policy measure for supporting exports. They demand the refund of value-added tax and consumptio­n taxes already paid on exported products during manufactur­ing, circulatio­n and sales.

Despite China’s first-quarter export growth beating expectatio­ns, a State Council executive meeting earlier this month decided to increase export tax rebates to support foreign trade growth. Businesses with better credit records will have access to greater Customs clearance and tax refund facilitati­on.

Wang Daoshu, deputy commission­er of the State Taxation Administra­tion, said that in the next step, the government will enhance the linkage of export credit insurance and export tax rebate policies, and improve rebate policies for processing trade firms.

“The country will tap the potential of the departure tax refund policy, optimize the layout of tax refund stores, and vigorously implement convenienc­e measures,” he said, noting that the average processing time for export tax rebates will be shortened to six days across the country this year.

Similar work used to take 10 days in 2019.

A total of 94,000 companies had enjoyed 37.7 billion yuan ($5.7 billion) in export tax rebates between March 20, 2020 and the end of 2021, after the government raised the rate of export tax rebates on 1,464 products two years ago, STA data showed.

The government will step up efforts to reinforce data-sharing and smooth the connection­s among Customs, tax and other department­s to further streamline export tax rebate procedures, said Xie Wen, director-general of the goods and services tax department at the STA.

Efforts will also be made to support cross-border e-commerce firms by encouragin­g qualified companies to actively claim export tax rebates, said Yuan Xiaoming, director-general of the finance department at the Ministry of Commerce.

“We will promote the applicatio­n of hedging products and services, facilitate the docking between banks and businesses, and make cross-border settlement­s in renminbi more convenient, as well as help micro, small and mediumsize­d foreign trade companies better manage exchange rate risks,” he said.

Through policy assistance, the Ministry of Commerce started to work with China Export & Credit Insurance Corp in late February to give full play to export credit insurance’s function in risk prevention and credit enhancemen­t.

By stepping up the use of export credit insurance, the ministry will protect an exporter from the risk of nonpayment by a foreign buyer, and improve foreign trade companies’ risk-hedging capability for two-way fluctuatio­ns in the exchange rate of the Chinese yuan to the US dollar, as part of holistic efforts to stabilize market entities and spur foreign trade growth.

Dang Xiaohong, deputy directorge­neral of the national office of port administra­tion at the General Administra­tion of Customs, said the administra­tion will guide local Customs branches to take measures according to different modes of transporta­tion, different industries and product characteri­stics to help businesses solve the difficulti­es in the process of Customs clearance.

For instance, Customs authoritie­s have opened a green channel for the import of important goods for people’s livelihood­s, and provided Customs clearance support for the aviation, integrated circuit, automobile manufactur­ing and other industries. They have also ensured the import and export of key parts and components to maintain the stability and smooth flow of industrial and supply chains, she said.

Wang Bo, head of the procuremen­t and logistics department at Taixing Jinjiang Chemical Industry Co Ltd in Jiangsu province, said, “Although overseas demand has picked up, due to the increase in transporta­tion costs and rising raw material prices, our cash flow has been tight.”

Fortunatel­y, the government tax rebate policies have greatly eased the financial pressure on the company, he said, adding the manufactur­er of biofuels and industrial chemicals received 1.14 million yuan worth of export rebates in late March.

 ?? HUA XUEGEN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works on the production line of a company that makes power frequency converters for export in Suzhou, Jiangsu province.
HUA XUEGEN / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee works on the production line of a company that makes power frequency converters for export in Suzhou, Jiangsu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States