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BEIJING, Sept. 20 (Xinhuanet by Jiang Guocheng
) -- China is unlikely to introduce fuel oil tax this year as officials from
various government departments failed to reach a consensus on the move last
week, central government officials said.
The State Development and Reform
Commission (SDRC), which is responsible for the country's oil price regulation,
summoned a ministerial meeting on the planned fuel oil tax on Sept. 15, the
Beijing-based Economic Information Daily reported Monday.
Sixteen government ministries were present at the
meeting, including the State Administration of Taxation, the ministries of
finance, agriculture, communications, construction and commerce, and the general
administrations of customs and civil aviation.
Following the meeting, a SDRC official said it seems
the proposed fuel oil tax program will not be introduced this year because too
many difficult problems remain unsolved.
In a separate report published on Tuesday, the
newspaper said conflicts of interests among various government departments, and
between the central and local governments were the fundamental reason behind the
failure by the departments to reach an agreement.
The proposal on introducing fuel oil tax was put
forward in 1994.
In January 2001 and early 2002, Finance Minister Jin
Renqing, then director general of the State Administration of Taxation, said
China will introduce the fuel oil tax program at an opportunetime.
Xie Xuren, Jin's successor, also made similar remarks
last January when asked to comment on the government's plan on fuel oiltax
reform.
Without a fuel oil tax, China has been instead
collecting road preset maintenance fee from automobile users no matter how much
gasoline or diesel oil they use.
The fee, which exceeds 100 billion yuan (12 billion
US dollars) each year, has been collected by the country's Ministry of
Communications, which employs 270,000 to do the job, according to the newspaper.
Under the proposed fuel oil tax program, the paper
said, the ministry will no longer collect the fee, the taxation authorities will
take over the job, but will have to make job arrangements for those 270,000
employees.
Chinese farmers, who have been exempted from the fee
for using automotive vehicle, will have to pay more for gasoline and diesel oil.
The newspaper said the central government is
considering oil subsidies for those farmers, but it is likely the subsidies will
go to the wrong hands who may pretend to be users of automotive vehicle.
Subsidies for tax drivers will be another big
problem, the paper said.
The country's auto sector will sustain great impact
by the introduction of fuel oil tax, the paper said, quoting auto industry
sources.
Manufacturers of fuel-efficient auto vehicles will
benefit from the proposed tax, while producers of those less efficient vehicles,
such as SUV and MPV, will suffer to varying degrees, the sources said.
Despite the problems, the Chinese government said the
proposed tax will be introduced.
Zhang Guobao, deputy minister in charge of the State
Development and Reform Commission, told reporters earlier this month more and
more people have come to realize the necessity of introducing the tax.
The central government has in the past few years
intended to introduce fuel oil tax when the oil prices drop to a certain low
level, he said.
But, Zhang said, "We have failed to get the chance of
lower oil prices".
Analysts believe China should introduce the reform as
soon as possible.
An official with the Ministry of Communications told
the Economic Information Daily the ministry supports the planned tax.
The official said the reform will not succeed unless
the issues regarding subsidies of the socially disadvantaged groups and
coordination of the reform are solved properly.
Professor Xie Zhihua, deputy president of Beijing
Technology and Business University, said the reform was intended to regulate the
country's fiscal system and stem institutional corruption within some
departments and localities.
He said another problem that needs to be solved is
that some consumers paid too much under the present fee collection arrangement.
Xie called on the central government to push forward
the important reform through balancing the interests of various parties
involved.
The problems can be solved if the central authorities
are determined to introduce the reform with more skills and better coordination,
said the professor.
The proposed reform is one of the factors the Chinese
government will take into account as it considers improving its mechanism of oil
product pricing, analysts said.
The prices of China's gasoline and other oil products
are much lower than that of the world, and oil refineries reported growing
losses and gasoline shortage has been reported in some coastal cities in China.
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