China announced wide-ranging revisions to its tax rebates regime
for exports on Thursday, a long-awaited move aimed to cut its
foreign trade surplus and improve its industrial structuring.
The changes, which took effect on Friday, include tax rebates on
glass, cement, textiles and cigarette lighters decreased to 11
percent from 13 percent.
Rebates for steel products would be cut to 8 percent from 11
percent and those for some non-ferrous metals would fall to 5, 8 or
11 percent from 13 percent, the Ministry of Finance said in a
statement on Thursday without specifying the metals involved.
The widely expected move "is one of the measures taken this year
in line with the State Council's macro-economic controls," the
statement said.
"It will help optimize the industrial and export structure and
maintain balanced export growth."
Rebates on non-metal minerals such as coal and natural gas would
be scrapped, a move apparently aimed to meet surging domestic
demands by discouraging their export.
"As domestic demand for natural resources and energy has soared
in recent years in order to power the strong economy, the removal
of tax rebates on those commodities makes great sense," said Han
Meng, an economist with the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences.
Tax rebates on heavy machinery, bio-pharmaceutical products,
some IT products and other items would instead increase to 17
percent from the current 13 percent, an arrangement aimed to
encourage exports in those sectors and help improve the industry's
structuring.
Enterprises, according to the policy amendment, would be given a
three-month transitional period to adapt to the tax changes.
The country has long used tax rebates as a policy incentive to
encourage exports. However, the mounting trade surplus in recent
years has led some economists and government ministries to call for
a re-evaluation of the policy.
In August, China's trade surplus hit US$18.8 billion for a
fourth straight monthly record.
Fuelled by the surging foreign trade surplus, the mounting
foreign exchange reserve, which stood at US$954 billion by the end
of July and is set to exceed 1 trillion soon, is putting great
pressure on the government as trade frictions are on the rise.
Tax rebates on exports and the foreign exchange rate are widely
viewed as two policy measures readily available for the government
to tackle the ballooning trade surplus, experts said.
"However, adjusting the tax rebate is relatively more effective
and easy considering that any move on the foreign exchange rate is
more sensitive and more complex," said Zhong Wei, director of the
centre for finance studies at Beijing Normal University.
(China Daily September 16, 2006)