Gov't plans export tax rebate slash (China Daily) Updated: 2006-07-24 08:32
China will reduce tax rebates on exports of resource-intensive and
environmentally-harmful products, officials say.
An as-yet unreleased
policy is scheduled to take effect around September or October, despite strong
protests from domestic companies and traders, according to Caijing
magazine.
The move reflects the government's drive to shift the nation
away from low-value-added exports.
"The government wants to see a trade
balance. We're not deliberately seeking rising surpluses," said Ministry of
Commerce spokesman Chong Quan.
Introduced in 1985, tax rebates for
exports have made Chinese products more competitive on the international
market.
But it is now expected rebates will be cut by an average of two
per cent for products such as textiles, iron and steel. Only high-tech
industries will avoid the cuts their rebate is being
increased.
"Export rebates for high energy-consuming, polluting and
resource-intensive products should be stopped," said Fu Ziying, assistant to the
Minister of Commerce.
Booming exports have contributed significantly to
the Chinese economic miracle.
In recent years, the cart of the Chinese
economy has been hauled by the two "strong horses" of investment and foreign
trade, while the "weak donkey" of domestic consumption totters in the
middle.
To sustain the steady development of the national economy,
policymakers aim to spur domestic consumption by increasing consumer purchasing
power.
The strategy could help rein in over-investment, ease pressure on
the renminbi and dissuade foreign anti-dumping lawsuits which result from the
mammoth trade surplus, industry officials say.
In the five years since
China's accession to the WTO, the country's foreign trade has grown at an
average annual rate of more than 30 per cent.
In the first six months of
2006 foreign trade reached US$795.7 billion, up 23.4 per cent year on year.
China chalked up a trade surplus of US$61.5 billion in the first half of this
year, up 54.9 per cent year on year, according to statistics from the General
Administration of Customs.
On this basis, China's trade surplus is set
to exceed US$100 billion this year, industry officials say.
In the first
half of this year, foreign-invested, export-oriented processing firms generated
total foreign trade of US$465.3 billion, up 25.8 per cent on the same period
last year, and accounting for 58.5 per cent of China's total. (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
|