HONG KONG, May 7 (Xinhua) -- Hong Kong's top earner, usually referring to
individuals hired by a company, in 2006-07 paid 56 million HK dollars (about 7.2
million U.S. dollars) in salaries tax, 45 million HK dollars less than the one
in 2005-06, revealed the Inland Revenue Department of Hong Kong here Monday.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong's top profits-tax earner, usually referring to a
company, paid 2.07 billion HK dollars (265.4 million U.S. dollars) of profits
tax, according to the department's largest statistics released here Monday.
The department did not give the names of the top earners and payers of
salaries tax and profits tax, however, for the sake of privacy.
According to the department's figures, the second and third top earners in
2006-07 paid 55 million HK dollars (7.05 million U.S. dollars) and 45 million HK
dollars (5.77 million U.S. dollars), 11million HK dollars (1.41 million U.S.
dollars) and 16 million HK dollars (2.05 million U.S. dollars) respectively
higher than those corresponding in 2005-06.
The amount of profits tax paid by the top 10 companies in 2006-07 ranged
from 2.07 billion HK dollars (265.4 million U.S. dollars) to 470 million HK
dollars (60.26 million U.S. dollars), lower than the range of 2.54 billion HK
dollars (325.64 million U.S. dollars) to 560 million HK dollars (71.8 million
U.S. dollars) recorded in 2005-06.
Total tax revenue soared to a record high of 155 billion HK dollars (about
20 billion U.S. dollars) in 2006-07, up 7 percent from the last financial year.
Income from profits tax rose 3 percent to 71.9 billion HK dollars (9.2 billion
U.S. dollars) over a year earlier while that from salaries tax grew 3 percent to
38.6billion HK dollars (4.95 billion U.S. dollars), revealed the department's
statistics.
A spokesman for the department said the amount of tax paid by a handful of
taxpayers does not necessarily reflect the overall revenue-collection trend.
The amounts of tax paid by a few taxpayers were particularly high, probably
because they were in receipt of income other than salaries, the spokesman said.
Bonuses, commissions, allowances and share-option gains also form part of a
taxpayer's assessable income.
The tax payable in Hong Kong in 2006-07 included the final tax for 2005-06
and provisional tax for 2006-07. This is primarily computed with reference to
the income or profits earned by the taxpayer or company in 2005-06, according to
the department.
However, as the 2005-06 provisional tax paid in the previous year could be
set off against the tax charged for the year, it is difficult to ascertain the
total assessable income or profits of an individual taxpayer or company from the
amount of tax paid for the year, the spokesman said.
The level of profits tax paid, however, depends much on the business
performance of individual companies, he added.