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BEIJING, Dec. 9 (Xinhuanet) -- China has done
substantial work in tariff reform and will further cut import duties according
to the commitments made during its accession to the World Trade Organization
(WTO) in 2001, official said.
; Liu Wenjie, deputy director
of the Chinese General Administration of Customs, said at a press conference
held here Tuesday that China sorted out and revised more than 3,000 customs
documents which went against WTO rules and international practices since 2000.
Apart from the amended and practiced customs law, a
newly-amended national regulation on import and export duties has been
promulgated and will take effect as of Jan. 1, 2004, Liu said.
A new regulation on intellectual property protection
will be published shortly and a customs announcement on the predefinition of
place of origin is under deliberation, according to Liu.
Meanwhile, China reduced tariff rates yearly. In
2003, the average tariff rate was cut from 12 percent to 11 percent. In 2002,
the figure was reduced from 15.3 percent to 12 percent, Liu said.
Liu went on to say that the decrease of tariffs
spurred Chinese imports and helped increase tariff income.
In the January-November period, Liu noted, Chinese
imports roseby 39.1 percent to hit 370.6 billion US dollars.
Customs income surged by 103.8 billion yuan (12.55
billion US dollars) to 338 billion yuan in the same period, Liu said.
The soaring trade benefited China and its partners
including Japan, the United States and the European Union, which recorded 100
billion US-dollar trade volume with China respectively in the first 10 months of
2003, Liu said.
Liu acknowledged that the reduction of tariff rates
served to promote the integration of the domestic and international market and
China will further the downward progress according to WTO arrangement.
The improved customs management also helped to create
a fair, transparent and predictable environment for the companies, Liu said.
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