China accelerates tax rebates to boost exports
2003-06-27 China Daily
In an effort to minimize the negative impact of SARS on exports, China is
planning to speed up tax rebate payments to export companies.
The Ministry of Commerce and the State Administration of Taxation issued a
notice yesterday requiring local commerce and taxation departments to strengthen
co-operation and speed up payments of tax rebates to ensure steady export
growth.
"The governments at various levels should give first priority to paying tax
rebates to key export companies," the notice said.
Tax rebates are a common practice adopted in international trade. The
government usually refunds the value-added and consumption taxes to export
companies which sell products abroad to increase the competitiveness of these
ventures.
The State Administration of Taxation has issued four groups of tax rebate
quotas, totalling 107.2 billion yuan (US$12.9 billion) for export companies
since the beginning of this year.
By the end of May, tax departments had returned 57.9 billion yuan (US$7.0
billion) to export companies, an increase of 19.2 per cent compared with a year
ago.
Earlier, the government said the country's tax rebate quota for this year was
about 129 billion yuan (US$15.5 billion).
"This is about 100 billion yuan (US$12 billion) less than the real demand if
the exports grew by only 10 per cent," said Niu Li, a senior economist with the
State Information Centre.
The government should try to increase the tax rebate quota first, Niu said.
A Ministry of Finance official said the ministry is working on a plan to
increase the tax rebate quota for this year.
Ni Hongri, a senior researcher with the Development Research Centre under the
State Council, said the current fiscal situation allows the country to increase
the rebate quota.
"The fiscal situation for the first four months was surprisingly good," she
said.
By the end of April, the increased fiscal revenue had reached 167.5 billion
yuan (US$20.2 billion), well above the 158.7 billion yuan (US$19.1 billion)
increased revenue expected for 2003.
China is likely to increase the tax rebate quota by 20 billion yuan to 30
billion yuan (US$2.4 billion to US$3.6 billion) this year, Ni said.
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