CHINA will reduce or eliminate export taxes on nearly 100 categories of goods including some agricultural products and fertilizers starting next month in its latest move to help the country’s flagging trade sector.
The cuts are the first outright tax reductions since December 2008 and follow seven increases in export tax rebates since August.
While the policies give at least some relief to the nation’s struggling exporters, they contribute little to fixing the main problem: restoring external demand, industry analysts said.
The Ministry of Finance said yesterday that 31 types of goods such as wheat, rice and soya beans will be exempted from export taxes starting July 1.
Direct, effective
Large tax reductions will apply to another 60 categories of products, including fertilizer and chemicals. The tax on phosphate fertilizer, for instance, will be cut from 75 percent to 10 percent.
“The move, similar to the previous increases in export tax rebates, is an obvious bid to counter the falling trade,” said Xue Jun, an analyst at Changjiang Securities Co. “A tax cut is more direct and effective than rebates and enhances cash flow.”
A tax cut is immediate, while exporters have to wait to receive a tax rebate.
“The frequency of these moves illustrates that the Chinese government still attaches great importance to exports, though domestic demand is considered key to the country’s economic recovery,” Xue said.
China’s May exports fell 26.4 percent from a year earlier to US$88.8 billion, the worst drop in at least 14 years. Last month, China announced it would raise tax rebates on more than 600 types of exports, including machinery, toys, plastic products and steel. Total rebates amounted to 102.9 billion yuan (US$15.1 billion) in the first quarter, up 18.4 percent from a year earlier.
Vice Commerce Minister Zhong Shan said China will spare no effort to protect the country’s share of the global market.
“China’s trade will suffer a retreat this year and experience slow growth in the coming years,” Zhong said in an article published in the Economic Daily yesterday. “We should go all out to stabilize trade. The focal point should be to avoid losing share in the global market. It is of great importance to keep companies alive and make jobs available, which lays the foundation for the expansion of domestic demand.”
Despite falling volume, Zhong said it may be possible for China to raise its share of global trade.
He said Chinese exports last year accounted for 8.86 percent of the world’s total exports in terms of value, still below the level of export giants Germany and the United States, which each hold around 12 percent of global market share.
At a time when people are slashing spending, China should be able to benefit because the country sells more necessities than luxuries.
CHINA will reduce or eliminate export taxes on nearly 100 categories of goods including some agricultural products and fertilizers starting next month in its latest move to help the country’s flagging trade sector.
The cuts are the first outright tax reductions since December 2008 and follow seven increases in export tax rebates since August.
While the policies give at least some relief to the nation’s struggling exporters, they contribute little to fixing the main problem: restoring external demand, industry analysts said.
The Ministry of Finance said yesterday that 31 types of goods such as wheat, rice and soya beans will be exempted from export taxes starting July 1.
Direct, effective
Large tax reductions will apply to another 60 categories of products, including fertilizer and chemicals. The tax on phosphate fertilizer, for instance, will be cut from 75 percent to 10 percent.
“The move, similar to the previous increases in export tax rebates, is an obvious bid to counter the falling trade,” said Xue Jun, an analyst at Changjiang Securities Co. “A tax cut is more direct and effective than rebates and enhances cash flow.”
A tax cut is immediate, while exporters have to wait to receive a tax rebate.
“The frequency of these moves illustrates that the Chinese government still attaches great importance to exports, though domestic demand is considered key to the country’s economic recovery,” Xue said.
China’s May exports fell 26.4 percent from a year earlier to US$88.8 billion, the worst drop in at least 14 years. Last month, China announced it would raise tax rebates on more than 600 types of exports, including machinery, toys, plastic products and steel. Total rebates amounted to 102.9 billion yuan (US$15.1 billion) in the first quarter, up 18.4 percent from a year earlier.
Vice Commerce Minister Zhong Shan said China will spare no effort to protect the country’s share of the global market.
“China’s trade will suffer a retreat this year and experience slow growth in the coming years,” Zhong said in an article published in the Economic Daily yesterday. “We should go all out to stabilize trade. The focal point should be to avoid losing share in the global market. It is of great importance to keep companies alive and make jobs available, which lays the foundation for the expansion of domestic demand.”
Despite falling volume, Zhong said it may be possible for China to raise its share of global trade.
He said Chinese exports last year accounted for 8.86 percent of the world’s total exports in terms of value, still below the level of export giants Germany and the United States, which each hold around 12 percent of global market share.
At a time when people are slashing spending, China should be able to benefit because the country sells more necessities than luxuries.
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CHINA will increase the tax rebate rates on some textile, iron and steel, nonferrous metal, petrochemical, electronics and light industrial exports starting on Wednesday.
The decision was made yesterday at an executive meeting of the State Council. The Cabinet agreed that it was necessary to raise tax rebates on some export products to fully implement the country’s economic stimulus package and the support plans for 10 industries.
The exact amounts of the rebate were not revealed by the State Council.
China has raised the export tax rebate rate for textiles four times since last August. It was increased previously in February from 14 percent to 15 percent.
China’s exports plummeted 25.7 percent year-on-year in February, the worst decline in more than a decade, as global demand deteriorated amid the deepening recession.
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SEVERAL economic indicators for December have shown signs of recovery, though China’s fourth-quarter growth slowed, said the head of the National Bureau of Statistics.
“Last December, the economy was hit quite hard by the global financial crisis, but the December figures also began to show some positive changes and these changes are very important for us,” Ma Jiantang said.
The rebound in money supply, which rose 17.8 percent, the quickest in seven months, and loan growth in December means that the moderate monetary policy has been effective, Ma said.
Retail sales jumped 17.4 percent last month in annualized terms, up from 16.6 percent in November, with a rebound in goods like cars, garments and cosmetics. Ma also pointed out that there was a pick-up in investment sentiment citing an ING report which said investor confidence in China rose to 103 in the fourth quarter from 88 in the third.
“Almost all major monthly indicators point to a recovery,” driven by rising domestic demand – a result of aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus – and stable exports, Merrill Lynch’s economist Ting Lu said.
Crude steel production, a major indicator of industrial activities, rose to 37.79 million tons in December from 35.19 million tons in November, after China in November announced the 4-trillion-yuan (US$585 million) fiscal stimulus package to support growth.
China has raised export tax rebates by several steps to help revive exports. In December, the government increased export tax refunds on 3,770 tariff lines including mechanical and electrical products, or 27.9 percent of all exports. Exports shrank 2.2 percent in November, the first drop in seven years.
Goods that are eligible for export tax refunds saw positive export growth of 4.8 percent in December, against an overall negative growth of 2.8 percent, Ma said. “This means our export policies have started to show results,” he said.
Ma said the government would wait and see whether these positive changes are sustainable or just temporary. “But such positive changes are just like sunshine in cold winter and light at the break of a dawn, and also little sparks that can ignite a flame,” he said, adding he has confidence in China’s economy.
China’s gross domestic product growth slowed to 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter from 9.0 percent in the third as the global financial crisis deepened into domestic economy.
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Just today we have underlined totally 3-phase the tax rebate hikes put into effect phase by phase. Very same day, the forth phase of tax rebate increases has been published.
The new 4th phase adjustments covering machinery products. Here is the news:
BEIJING, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) — China will increase the export tax rebates for some machinery products as of Jan. 1, 2009, in a bid to alleviate cost burdens on exporters, the country’s taxation watchdogs said Monday.
The rebate hikes will involve 553 types of high-tech and high value-added mechanical and electrical products, the Ministry of Finance (MOF) and the State Administration of Taxation announced.
Export tax rebate rates for industrial robots and inertial navigation systems for aviation use will be increased to 17 percent, from 13 percent and 14 percent respectively.
The rebate rates for exported motorcycles and sewing machines will rise to 14 percent. Their current rebate rates stand at 11 percent and 13 percent respectively.
“The move will help ease the sufferings of Chinese exporters and boost the country’s confidence in fighting the financial crisis,” the MOF said in a statement.
It was China’s fourth rebate hike on exported products this year, and one of several government’s measures to counter the global economic downturn that has dampened foreign demand.
The most recent increase took effect on Dec.1, covering 3,770 items of labor-intensive, mechanical and electrical products, or 27.9 percent of the country’s total exports.
The previous two rebates were made in August and November.
Official data showed China’s November exports declined year-on-year by 2.2 percent to 115 billion U.S. dollars, the first monthly decline since June 2001. Before that, export growth slowed from 21.5 percent in September to 19.2 percent in October.
China levies value-added tax on most products, but refunds varying amounts of that tax on goods that are exported. The government usually adjusts the size of export tax rebates for different types of goods when it is trying to encourage or discourage growth in particular industries.
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We want to redraw attention to the newly adjusted VAT rabates again. Because a total of 3,770 items, in the third export tax rebate increase this year, is put into affect in December.
The items involved include labor-intensive, mechanical and electrical products.
So those buying from China is better to learn whether there is a change for their products. Buyers can decrease their buying prices if there is are tax rebate increase on their items. Because, an export rebate increase means a decrease in the manufacturer’s total costs.
Rises in tax rebate rates varied among different items. For example, the rate on tires was raised from 5 to 9 percent while glassware was up 5 to 11 percent. Rates on labor-intensive products such as luggage, shoes and umbrellas were elevated from 11 to 13 percent.
The 3,770 items accounted for 27.9 percent of the country’s total exports.
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