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Home >> Business
UPDATED: 22:21, January 24, 2007
Bullish market boosts China's securities stamp tax revenue
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China's securities stamp tax revenue more than doubled in 2006, backed by the huge transaction volume.

The government received 17.95 billion yuan (2.24 billion U.S. dollars) in securities stamp duty last year, up 166 percent over 2005, according to the State Administration of Taxation (SAT).

Spurred by heavy capital inflow, revenue soared despite the tax rate cut, Xie Xuren, director of the SAT said here on Wednesday.

The government required both buyers and sellers of stocks to pay stamp tax according to the transaction volume.

The government halved the stamp duty rate to 0.1 percent from Jan. 24, 2005 in a bid to help boost the depressed equity market.

China's stock markets ended a five-year bearish period last year. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index surged 130 percent to2,675 points at the end of 2006. The two mainland stock exchanges registered aggregate turnover of 9.05 trillion yuan in 2006, an increase of 186.22 percent on 2005.

Source:Xinhua


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