Latest News:  

English>>Business

Taxing like there was no tomorrow (4)

(Global Times)

09:22, January 11, 2013

Local governments are facing a lack of fiscal revenue, and thus have transferred the crisis onto companies, said Cai. Leaders at all levels of government see their political and career future determined by their achievements, which are mainly appraised by GDP growth.

Therefore, tax quotas are increased gradually from provincial governments down to county-level governments, before finally being footed by enterprises and business owners, he said, adding that entrepreneurs have lost confidence in the general business environment.

Within the past five months, the total amount of taxes for industrial enterprises in Wenzhou have increased by 1.9 percent, despite a 19 percent drop in profits, according to a research report by Financial and Economic Committee of the Zhejiang Provincial People's Congress in July 2012.

In China, small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) suffer from six kinds of "hidden" burdens, including taxes, sundry fees, fines and corruption, according to a comment posted on People's Daily by Zhang Bin, a researcher with the Institute for Finance and Trade Economics under Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Economic confidence

The real situation is in sharp contrast to what officials promised. Overhead levies are not allowed, vowed Finance Minister Xie Xuren in a report to the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress on August 29, 2012.

Actions by local governments have flown in the face of preferential policies for SMEs issued by the central government, said Cai, adding that the fairest way to implement preferential policies is to reduce taxes for SMEs across the board instead of giving them occasional prizes.

【1】 【2】 【3】 【4】 【5】


We recommend:

Mainland, Taiwan airlines sign co-op contract

Great changes in Zhengzhou railway station

Wanda Group ventures onto the global stage

Sports car makers look to mainland market

Top Ten Economic Events in 2012

'Gold road' laid with gold bars

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:马茜、梁军)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Nanjing MAC organizes air-landing training

  2. China's destroyer conducts live-fire drill

  3. First humanoid robot at Int’l Space Station

  4. Gunshot reported in Changsha street

  5. Ugly 'Tower of Large Intestine' found

  6. Wonderful falcon game in Xinjiang

  7. KFC apologizes for chicken scandal

  8. Pianist Lang Lang holds new year concert

  9. Beautiful lanterns decorated in Suzhou

  10. Love around familiar places

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. When Chinese wives meet American mothers-in-law
  2. Will you leave a city because of cold?
  3. Labor system reform renders salute to Constitution
  4. China's yuan unlikely to appreciate sharply in 2013
  5. Good times gone?
  6. Salaries stifled amid sluggish exports
  7. China to surpass U.S. by 2049: report
  8. Proposed Beijing law seeks data on charities
  9. 2012: turning point for Chinese swimming
  10. Debate rages online: Bribes or donations?

What’s happening in China

A web user recently posted a photo of a twisted building in the suburb of Beijing, calling it "Tower of Large Intestine".

  1. China charity donates over 1.6 bln yuan
  2. Relief supplies rushed to freeze-hit south China
  3. Left-behind children to be registered, educated
  4. Ministry boosts orphan care by private agencies
  5. Beijing court jails plane bomb hoaxer