BEIJING, April 3 -- Taxation authorities are mulling
reform of the personal income tax system by clubbing total income under one head
and lowering the top rate to check evasion and simplify computation.
Currently, taxpayers pay
personal income tax on 11 different
categories, such as salary, rental income and freelance earnings, with different
thresholds and rates.
"A unitary tax scheme could solve the problem," a
State Administration of Taxation (SAT) official, who did not want to be named,
told China Business News.
The current scheme presents loopholes to high-income
earners who might divide their income into several categories for evasion, he
added.
Only a small proportion of the country's top earners
filed personal income tax statements before Monday's deadline the first time SAT
has required those who earn more than 120,000 yuan (15,400 U.S. dollars) a year
to do so.
According to the latest SAT statistics, 1.37 million
people across the country had filed their income by March 30; but the figure
accounts for only 15 percent of the estimated 6-7 million high-income earners in
the country, according to experts.
Sources at SAT also said there are plans to reduce
the number of income tax bands from nine to five and cut the top rate.
People currently pay a progressive income tax ranging
from 5 to 45 percent on incomes starting at 1,600 yuan (206 dollars) per month.
The sources said SAT has set the goal of implementing
the changes by 2010.
According to Gao Peiyong, an expert in finance at the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the requirement on income tax returns sets
the foundation for a unitary scheme.
But experts warn that the revised tax scheme should
take into account the conditions of taxpayers.
An Tifu, a retired professor in finance with Renmin
University of China, said taxpayers should be allowed deductions for housing
loan repayments, children's education and medical costs, like in many developed
economies.
"The current computation ignores housing, education
and medical care expenditures, which, in many cases, are shouldered by
individuals," he said.
Personal income tax receipts totalled 245.2 billion
yuan (30.65 billion dollars) in 2006, up 17.1 percent year-on-year, according to
SAT figures.
(Source: China Daily)