Off the wire
Japan, EU eye to boost trade, anti-terrorism cooperation  • Irish naval vessel rescues further 300 migrants off Libyan coast  • Urgent: U.S. economy contracts 0.7 pct in Q1  • Heavy downpours affect 200,000 in east China  • Roundup: KSE ends week, month on bullish note  • Feature: China supports easy access to healthcare in Ghanaian community  • Roundup: Singapore stocks end down 0.75 pct  • Whistle-blower faces online backlash following freeloading controversy  • China's central bank issues report on financial stability  • Belgium to investigate into suspected BND spying: media  
You are here:   Home

China's import tax cut to reduce revenue, aid consumption

Xinhua, May 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

China's latest cuts to import duties will reduce fiscal revenue while boosting domestic consumption, said vice finance minister Shi Yaobin on Friday at a press conference.

The Ministry of Finance (MOF) announced on Monday that China will cut import taxes on clothing, cosmetics and some other goods from June 1.

The MOF said that it will slash duty by half, on average, on suits, fur garments and shoes. A tariff on cosmetics will fall to 2 percent from 5 percent, while a duty on diapers will decline to 2 percent from 7.5 percent.

There is no doubt that the cuts will reduce fiscal revenue, said Shi, while declining to give an exact amount, but he did not expect revenue to decrease too much given that more imported goods mean more import tax revenue.

With strong purchasing power, Chinese mainland travelers often buy goods as diverse as diapers and handbags abroad to avoid import and consumer taxes back home. Mainland tourists abroad spent 165 billion U.S. dollars in 2014, up from 129 billion U.S. dollars in 2013. Endi