BEIJING, Sept. 13 -- Shanghai may soon restore a land
appreciation tax on residential houses after levying the tax on villas last
June, market sources said.
"For the past month, some property agents have been
speculating that land appreciation tax will soon be levied on condos," a
property agent told China Daily.
"We believe it's very possible that Shanghai may
restore the imposition of land appreciation tax on residential houses," said the
source.
Shanghai began levying the tax on villas on June 1,
accounting for 30 to 60 percent of the capital gains from the transfer of
property rights or the transaction carried out by a real estate company.
"It was not based on a new policy, but on an old one,
which was promulgated more than 10 years ago," said Yin Kunhua, a longtime
property expert in Shanghai.
This policy was issued by the central government as
early as December 13, 1993, but "didn't get implemented effectively across the
country when it was issued," said Yin.
Gains resulting from the sale of property rights or
transactions by a real estate company are taxable under this policy, and the tax
rate imposed on real appreciation corresponds to the progressive tax rates
amounting to a range from the minimum 30 percent to the maximum 60 percent of
the real appreciation.
"Many local governments including Shanghai stopped
imposing this tax for several reasons including the difficulty of calculating
allowable expenses that can be deducted from the sum of profits since the
regulation is too general to be adopted," said Yin.
The Shanghai municipal government offered detailed
regulations in 2003, 10 years later than the national tax policy.
As the central government started tightening land use
on Sept. 5, many experts and insiders predicted that common residential
houses those of no more than three bedrooms and of average selling prices will
soon be subject to land appreciation tax in Shanghai.
"The central government said clearly in its latest
land policy in early September that tax collectors should strengthen the
taxation levy and strictly control the range of tax reduction and exemption,"
said a source familiar with the land policy. "It naturally heralds the future
levy of land taxations like land appreciation tax."
(Source: China Daily)