The Times of India

TUESDAY, JUNE 04, 2002

Foreign firms to pay more tax: China

AFP

BEIJING: China will significantly raise taxes levied on foreign companies
from next year, state media reported on Tuesday, for the first time
providing a timetable for a long-expected policy change.
The steeper tax bill will come about as China eliminates most of the
preferential tax rates currently offered to foreign firms, the Beijing Times
said.
"Foreign companies' income tax and local companies' income tax will be
unified at some time next year," Finance Minister Xiang Huaicheng said
according to the paper. The paper gave no further details about how the
plans will be implemented, or whether the change will be gradual.
Xiang's comment was consistent with rumors that Chinese officials are
working on amendments to the enterprise income tax law, hoping to have the
new rules ready by late this year or early next year.
Local officials have long been arguing that a unified tax rate will
eventually be necessary because of China's entry into the World Trade
Organization (WTO) on December 11 last year.
The overall corporate tax rate in China is 33 percent, but foreigners now
pay as little as 15 percent as a result of incentive packages offered by
various localities and industries.
Officials preparing the tax law amendments favor a unified rate of 25
percent, according to people familiar with the draft.
Although on paper foreign companies appear to be immensely privileged
compared with their Chinese counterparts, the reality is more complicated
than that, observers said.
Many Chinese companies also pay preferential rates, according to obscure
exceptions that the non-transparent tax regime allows.
This may be why foreigners contribute a growing share of tax revenues in
China.
Last year, they paid 51.1 billion yuan (6.2 billion dollars) in enterprise
income tax, up 57 percent from the year before.
Chinese tax officials have previously suggested some tax incentives will be
allowed to remain for foreign companies already operating in China, arguing
this is permitted under WTO rules.

Copyright © 2002 Times Internet Limited. All rights reserved.



Reply via email to