Millions of rural vendors no doubt appreciated a recent decision
by State commercial officials to waive a collection of fees for
certain farmers in a bid to encourage entrepreneurship.
The State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC)
recently issued a document that scrapped both the registration and
the special administrative fees that farmers who sell agricultural
or other homemade products formerly had to pay.
The waiver of the fees, which other self-employed people still
have to pay, took effect last month.
The SAIC said the policy would help spur the development of the
private economy in rural areas.
The administrative fees include the market management and
self-employer administrative fees.
Under the old system, rural vendors had to pay 2-4 percent of
their sales volume to their local industry and commerce bureau to
cover the administrative fees, in addition to taxes.
The registration fee, levied by the local industry and commerce
authority, usually cost them 20 yuan (US$2.5).
According to statistics posted on the SAIC's website, rural
vendors account for about 15 percent of the 250 million
self-employed people in China, or 3.75 million people.
Ye Jingzhong, a rural studies expert at China Agricultural
University, said the measure would provide a big boost to the
non-public economic sector.
"It will reduce the burden on low-income rural vendors," Li
said. "It will also lower the threshold to entering the market and
encourage farmers to start businesses."
But Ye also noted that some local commerce bureaus could be
tempted to drag their feet on implementing the new policy or even
levy other fees to offset the lost fee revenue.
But a SAIC spokesman surnamed Cai said the fees paid by rural
vendors account for only a small portion of the revenue of
local-level commerce bureaus.
Other experts have suggested that the rule should cover a wider
range of self-employed people, and not just those who sell only
homemade products.
"The administrative fees on the self-employed should be
immediately eliminated nationwide," said Zhou Tianyong, a professor
at the Party School of Communist Party of China.
He added that the fees were a form of discrimination against
self-employed people as state-owned, foreign and private
enterprises do not have to pay them.
The measure is only the latest effort aimed at bolstering the
development of a new countryside, the goals of which include clean
villages, advanced local economies, rich cultural activities and
adequate household incomes.
The government has already scrapped agriculture-related fees to
help increase farmers' annual income.
Naturally, these policies have won applause from farmers.
"Apart from taxes, I had to submit about 120 yuan every month to
the local commerce bureau in administrative fees. I could hardly
earn more than 500 yuan (US$64) a month," said Mao Xiaojun, a
31-year-old vegetable seller in Caochi town, Xianyang, Southwest
China's Sichuan Province.
"The new rule, if it is really implemented in our city, will do
me a great favor," he added.
(China Daily March 1, 2007)
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