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BEIJING, March 23 -- The latest consumption tax
adjustments reflect the Ministry of Finance's cautious, pragmatic approach to
taxation reform.
The new levies on fuel oil, some wooden products and
luxury goods will mean a bigger role for taxation in promoting conservation and
in wealth distribution readjustment.
But fiscal policy designers refrained from going too
far in using taxation to achieve these policy goals.
Many items originally proposed as subjects of
consumption tax did not make the final list. The ministry restricted the items
to a scope where there was a consensus for the levy.
Some items, such as high-end furniture and garment
and consumption at karaoke shops, were dropped due to practicality problems.
This is fair, as tax should be an auxiliary tool for
economic managers.
Employment and stimulation of domestic demand, both
sensitive to tax changes, are also on policy makers' agendas.
A fine balance should be achieved.
Overly aggressive tax policies could be
counterproductive if they create confusion and distortions.
The announcement on Tuesday about consumption tax
changes also indicated that the finance ministry has opted to de-link reform of
consumption tax and value-added tax (VAT).
This is a realistic decision.
While the progress of VAT reform has been slower than
planned, there is no reason to postpone changes to consumption tax as well.
Both consumption tax and value-added tax are products
of the country's 1994 overhaul of its taxation system. A major aim of the
massive change 12 years ago was to put in place a system that suited the
emerging market economy.
Since then, the system has remained basically
unchanged.
But as policy goals and the economy itself have
developed, the need to modify the system has become increasingly evident.
For one, the current VAT system is thought to
discourage innovation, as enterprises cannot obtain tax rebates for purchasing
new equipment.
VAT reform is likely to lead to deceased tax
revenues, but introduction of new consumption taxes has the potential to
increase revenues.
With this in mind, VAT and consumption tax reforms
were originally meant to be packaged together, with the hope that the latter
would compensate for the losses in VAT.
But VAT reform experiments in northeastern provinces,
while achieving some of the expected goals, were not successful enough to prompt
policy-makers to spread the reform nationwide.
Policy-makers appear to have gradually given up the
idea of using new gains from consumption tax to make up for the predicted
decline in VAT.
Indeed, unless the items for consumption tax are
drastically expanded and high rates stipulated, it is impossible for consumption
tax accounting for just above 6 per cent of total tax revenues to shoulder this
task.
In addition, changes of consumption tax should not
only be about rate rises and new levies for more goods. Tax rates for some
products should be reduced, as we now see for small-engine cars.
Fiscal policy makers' approach to reform is
commendable. This approach is in line with the paramount goal of tax reform
boost development in the long term with no major fluctuation in revenues in the
short term.
(Source:China Daily) |