The long-delayed tax on retail sales of gasoline is
coming but the legislative affairs office of the Chinese cabinet
said the government is waiting for appropriate market
conditions.
The government is keeping a close watch on
international oil prices and is still trying to determine how the
tax revenue will be split, the unnamed cabinet official
said.
Rising oil prices have caused the price of retail
gasoline to jump significantly and the government is worried about
imposing the new tariff that would again pump up the cost of
gasoline.
China has intended to
replace its annual road maintenance fees charged to vehicle owners
with a gas tax in a law that was passed in 1997 but never put into
effect. Experts believe that imposing a new gas tax would
negatively impact China's consumer price index and create a new
burden for the country's millions of farmers.
According to the Ministry of Finance, Chinese farmers
spent 30 billion yuan (US$3.8 billion) on diesel oil in 2002. The
sum doubled to 60 billion yuan (US$7.6 billion) in 2004.
Some analysts say the tax has not been implemented
because a decision has to be made on how the revenue will be
distributed between central and local government
departments.
A fuel tax is also expected to help curb gas
consumption. While the road maintenance fee is applied to all
vehicles no matter how much they are driven, a tax on each liter of
gas will increase the per-kilometer cost of driving and help
persuade people to use public transportation.
The official said the law passed in the 1990s gives
the government the right to continue to collect road maintenance
fees until the new tax on gas is implemented.
Several local transportation bureaus are being sued by
drivers who say the government lost the right to collect the road
maintenance fee when the law was changed in the 1990s. They have
asked the government to reimburse them for the past fees they have
paid.
The cabinet official said that about 45 percent of the
revenues collected from car owners since 2003 were used to improve
highways. Just over 30 percent of the money went to new highway
construction, regular maintenance and road construction in rural
areas.
(Xinhua News Agency November 24, 2006)
|