Unified corporate tax to balance interests By Xu Binglan (China Daily) Updated: 2006-01-18 06:19
The concerns of domestic enterprises and the need to continue attracting
foreign investment will be taken into consideration while formulating a unified
corporate income tax, a top tax official said yesterday.
Foreign companies operating in China enjoy a preferential tax rate as low as
15 per cent, compared to 33 per cent for Chinese firms.
A resolution at the Fifth Plenary Session of the 16th Congress of the
Communist Party of China last year decided to unify the two systems.
The State Administration of Taxation (SAT) will balance domestic firms'
demand for a level playground and concerns that abolishing the preferential tax
rates could slow down the influx of foreign capital, Wang Li, deputy director of
SAT, said.
"We are consulting and working with related departments on this issue," Wang
told a press conference hosted by the State Council Information Office.
On nationwide reform of the value-added tax (VAT) system, Wang said
feasibility studies by financial authorities are under way.
A pilot project on VAT reform started in 2004 and is progressing "steadily"
in the three northeastern provinces of Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning, he
said.
But Wang did not give a timetable for the implementation of the
much-anticipated tax reforms in the two areas.
According to international custom, enterprises' expenditure on fixed-asset
investments is deducted from the amount taxed, but China did not adopt this
practice when the current VAT system started in 1994, mainly to deter overheated
investment then.
In recent years, both the government and enterprises have felt the need to
change the law so that enterprises are not overtaxed.
The country's high tax revenues were another issue addressed at the press
conference.
In many countries, the annual growth rate of taxes is roughly 3 percentage
points higher than GDP growth but in China the difference is much bigger.
The country's GDP was estimated to have grown 9.8 per cent last year, but tax
revenues rose by 20 per cent.
SAT Director Xie Xuren explained that a major reason was that tax growth rate
was calculated at current prices and economic growth rate at comparable prices.
"If calculated at current prices, the GDP may have grown by 13 to 14 per cent
last year," he said.
In addition, taxes are mainly collected from industries and services, which
grow faster than GDP; but the size of the economy also covers such slow-growing
sectors as agriculture which is why the tax growth rate could be higher than GDP
growth, Xie said.
Trade is also a factor: While foreign trade contributed to GDP growth with a
trade surplus, its share in tax revenues is high because an overwhelming
majority of imports are subject to tariffs.
(China Daily 01/18/2006 page2)
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