China to abolish age-old agricultural tax (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-12-25 08:48
In 1958, the NPC adopted the Regulation on Agricultural tax.
Feng Shuping, vice director of the Commission for Budget Affairs under the
NPC Standing Committee said since the founding of the People's Republic of China
in 1949, the Chinese government had always upheld the principle of increasing
grain output, but reducing taxes.
In 1949, a Chinese farmer should bear grain tax as much as 28 kilograms a
year, while the figure reduced to 13 kilograms in 2000, although the annual
grain output increased remarkably during the time.
She said abolishing agricultural tax would help reduce farmer's economic
burden, increase income and sharpen the country's agricultural competitive
power.
In March 2004, Premier Wen Jiabao announced in his annual government work
report that the Chinese government would reduce agricultural taxes year on year
and finally exempted it.
Since then, 28 provinces have decided by themselves to exempt agricultural
taxes, reducing tax burden worth of 50 billion yuan for 800 million farmers.
Government's endeavor of reducing and exempting agricultural tax has
accumulated experiences for the country's top legislature to finally root out
the category of agricultural tax, Liu said.
He said the economic losses caused by agricultural tax abolishment was within
the country's fiscal capacity.
Statistics show that in 1949, agricultural tax revenue took up to 39 percent
of the country's total tax revenue, the percentage dropped to merely one percent
in 2000. In 2005, the Chinese government only collected about 1.5 billion yuan
of agricultural taxes. Therefore, rooting out agricultural taxes could not
influence the country's financial revenue too much, he said.
He said abolishing agricultural taxes will reduce the local fiscal revenues.
For the economic well-developed provinces, the losses caused by rooting out
agricultural tax will be burdened by themselves, for those backward western
provinces or grain produce bases, the central government arranged 35.66 billion
yuan to subsidize them in 2005.
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