Off the wire
Roundup: Trump touts military sales to Saudi Arabia when meeting Crown Prince  • Urgent: Casualties feared as blast rocks Kabul  • Roundup: S. Korea hints at trilateral summit with DPRK, U.S., to offer high-level talks with DPRK  • Fonterra CEO resigns as dairy giant announces gross loss in first half results  • FLASH: BLAST HEARD IN KABUL, CASUALTIES FEARED: OFFICIAL  • Shaanxi aims to enter China's second division football league by 2019  • ChiNext Index closes lower Wednesday  • Chinese shares close lower Wednesday  • NBA standings  • NBA results  
You are here:  

China's fiscal revenue up 15.8 pct in first two months

Xinhua,March 21, 2018 Adjust font size:

BEIJING, March 21 (Xinhua) -- China's fiscal revenue rose 15.8 percent year on year to 3.66 trillion yuan (577.3 billion U.S. dollars) in the first two months of 2018, official data showed Wednesday.

The growth was much faster than the 7.5-percent rise registered in 2017, according to the Ministry of Finance website.

The central government collected more than 1.82 trillion yuan in fiscal revenue, up 19.1 percent year on year, while local governments saw fiscal revenue expand 12.7 percent to 1.83 trillion yuan.

During the January-February period, fiscal spending rose 16.7 percent year on year to 2.9 trillion yuan. Expenditure on transportation surged 55.7 percent to 147.5 billion yuan.

The ministry attributed the sharp rise to influences from the Spring Festival holiday, which means the future trend has yet to be seen.

With the economy on a firm footing and fiscal revenue increasing, China lowered its fiscal deficit target to 2.6 percent of GDP for 2018, down by 0.4 percentage points compared with 2017, the first drop since 2013.

The government deficit is projected to be 2.38 trillion yuan, with a central government deficit of 1.55 trillion yuan and local government deficit of 0.83 trillion yuan

Despite a lower deficit-to-GDP ratio, China has raised the budget for this year's general public expenditure by 7.6 percent to 21 trillion yuan, higher than a 6.1 percent rise in budget revenue. Enditem