The country's new unified corporate income tax for foreign and
domestic enterprises has been hailed for its efforts to create fair
competition between businesses, but its likely impact on economic
growth is also worth noting.
China passed the law, which leveled the tax rate to 25 percent,
on Friday.
"It is a basic rule-setting move that will create a level
playing field for all enterprises, a cornerstone principle of
market economics," Han Qi, a researcher at the University of
International Business and Economics, told China
Daily.
However, the effects of the law are not confined to promoting
fair competition. The legislation marks a shift in the country's
economic incentive strategy away from one based on taxation to one
based on individual industries, Wang Xiaoguang, a Beijing-based
senior economist, told China Daily.
For example, high-tech enterprises that are in line with State
industrial policy are eligible for preferential tax treatment under
the new law.
"This will have a positive impact on domestic technological
innovation," said Wang.
Domestic firms may take advantage of their lower tax burden to
spend more on developing new and competitive technologies, he
added.
The National Development and Reform Commission will draft
industry lists to implement the innovation article, he said.
Technological innovation has been in the spotlight in recent
years as the country has focused on following a more sustainable
path to economic development instead of relying heavily on
investment.
And for foreign enterprises, the new law does not just mean
having to pay slightly more taxes.
It is expected to further encourage foreign investment by
high-tech companies, though China has been emphasizing such
investment ever since it opened the doors to foreign funds, said
Han.
Many foreign investors export their products, which will help
China improve its export structure by increasing the value added of
the goods it ships.
"Although it will be a long-term process, it will happen," said
Wang.
The new law will also reduce the tax burden on domestic
companies, which should enable them to concentrate more on domestic
marketing.
"Many domestic enterprises have found it hard to sell
domestically given the weak domestic demand," said Wang. "As a
result, they choose to sell overseas."
With stronger balance sheets, domestic firms should have more
room to maneuver within the domestic market, said Wang.
This will somewhat ease international pressure on China, which
has seen its foreign trade surplus swell in recent years - the
trade surplus hit US$177.5 billion last year, up 74 percent
year-on-year.
The new tax law also stipulates continuing tax breaks for the
vast, but economically backward western regions, which should bring
more balance to the country's economic development.
"This is good news for the western regions, but also for China
as a whole in the long term," said Wang.
The country's eastern coast is home to about 90 percent of the
country's foreign-invested enterprises and the source of most of
its exports.
As the new law takes effect, the eastern regions may see some of
their foreign investment move west, noted Wang.
This should bring more capital to the western regions and help
speed up their industrialization, he added.
(China Daily March 20, 2007)
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