The first press conference of the Fifth Session of the Tenth
National People's Congress (NPC) was held at 11 AM today. Spokesman Jiang
Enzhu briefed the media on procedures and the session's agenda at
the Press Room of the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
Jiang Enzhu, addressing the hundreds of journalists who will
cover the fifth Plenary Session of the 10th National People's
Congress (NPC), formally announced that the session will open on
March 5 and run until March 16.
According to Jiang, the chief agenda for the session includes:
to hear and examine the report on the work of the government by
Primer Wen Jiabao; to discuss the drafts of the
Property Law and the Corporate Income Tax Law; to hear and examine
the report on the work of the Supreme People's Court and the report
on the work of the Supreme People's Procuratorate.
During the session, the Party and state leaders will attend the
opening and closing ceremonies, participate in some group meetings,
and discuss various social topics with NPC deputies, including the
increased cost of medical care, rising education fees, soaring
housing prices, limited social security coverage, mounting
employment pressure, and the widening income gap.
Jiang also stressed that the opening and closing ceremonies as
well as four presentation meetings will be open to the press.
Select group discussions and the joint discussions of the different
groups will also open to both foreign and domestic journalists.
Responding to a question raised by a reporter from Japan NHK TV
news regarding China's defense budget, Jiang said: "China's defense
budget for 2007 is expected to hit 350.92 billion yuan (US$44.94
billion), 17.8 percent higher than that last year."
He said that the figure marks an increase of 52.99 billion yuan
(US$6.79 billion) over that of last year. This year's defense
budget accounts for 7.5 percent of the nation's budgeted fiscal
expenditure, compared with 7.7 percent in 2004, 7.3 percent in
2005, and 7.4 percent in 2006.
Jiang explained that the defense budget is being raised to
further increase salaries and allowances for servicemen and army
retirees, ensuring their income follows the same rising trend as
economic and social development.
He also stressed that China will stay on the road of peace and
development and adhere to a defensive policy in military
building.
When asked by a reporter from Interfax-China of Russia about the
draft corporate income tax law to be deliberated at the upcoming
annual session, Jiang said, "The draft law will neither have a
massive influence on foreign companies nor affect their enthusiasm
for investment in China."
He revealed that the draft corporate income tax law sets a
unified income tax rate for domestic and foreign companies at 25
percent, a response to years of criticism that the tax policies are
unfair to domestic companies.
China currently practices dual income-tax structures, under
which domestic companies pay income tax at a nominal rate of 33
percent, while their foreign counterparts – who benefit from tax
waivers and incentives designed to encourage investment in China –
pay an average of 15 percent.
A total of 1,006 motions were submitted by 3,000 NPC deputies
during the last session. The Standing Committee of the 10th NPC
deliberated on 24 draft laws and law-related resolutions and has
adopted 15 of them since March 2006.
(China.org.cn by staff reporter Wang Ke, March 4, 2007)
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