BEIJING, May 30 -- The government will start to enforce a capital gains tax
on property profits in order to help cool the booming market and avert a real
estate bubble.
According to a report in Hong Kong newspaper Wen Wei Po, China would apply
the previously unenforced 20 percent tax on capital gains from property
transactions on new houses sold within two years of purchase. Previously the
law, which came into force in 1994, applied to sales within five years.
The law would also apply a tax of between 2 percent and 5 percent on the
full transaction value if the capital gain could not be established.
A sales tax and a gains tax will also be imposed on the sales of older
houses within five years after purchase, the China Business News yesterday cited
the State Administration of Taxation as saying.
Initially, the law will be enforced in about 10 major cities, including
Shenzhen and Beijing, according to reports.
These cities have seen dramatic increases in property prices recently.
Prices in some areas of Shenzhen have risen by 25 percent, and prices in the
northeastern city of Dalian have jumped by more than 10 percent, government data
showed. In Beijing, prices rose 14.8 percent in the first three months of this
year — compared to a year earlier — to 6,885 yuan (US$860) per square meter,
according to the city government. Hohhot, capital of Inner Mongolia region in
North China, reported a 14.9 percent hike. Shanghai is the only city where the
prices of residential houses dropped. Its housing prices declined by 6.2 percent
year on year.
The prices of older residential houses rose 5.8 percent in the nation in
April. Shenzhen, Dalian, Hohhot and Beijing had the biggest increases.
Housing prices in major Chinese cities have continued to soar in the first
few months of 2006, in defiance of the Central Government's year-long effort to
rein in the market.
In the face of increasingly bitter public outcry, the government has
ordered local governments to increase the supply of affordable housing and
threatened to crackdown on speculators and others who may be manipulating the
market.
(Source: Shenzhen Daily)