The Chinese government will reduce taxes for
low-income groups and restrict controls on tax evasion by high
earners to ensure fairness and social justice whilst narrowing the
wealth gap, said State Administration of Taxation commissioner Xie
Xuren on Wednesday.
Although the threshold for personal income tax was
raised from 800 yuan to 1,600 yuan per month from Jan. 1 last year,
revenue from personal income tax revenue climbed 17.1 percent
year-on-year to hit a record 245.23 billion yuan last year. This
represents a growth rate standing at 11.8 percentage points higher
than 2005.
Xie attributed the rapid growth to rising incomes
fueled by the booming national economy and tighter enforcement of
collection rules.
He said the SAT would fully employ its tax leverages
to narrow the widening gap between rich and poor thus contributing
more to China's social harmony and common prosperity.
Tax revenue from medium and low income earners grew by
8.4 percent last year while the collection from high income earners
surged 33.9 percent.
Xie outlined SAT measures taken to ensure "fair
taxation" last year, citing the regulation on taxing home
sales.
Under the regulation, people purchasing expensive
homes such as villas and townhouses and sell them more than five
years after the purchase must pay tax on the income while those who
buy affordable apartments are exempted.
The levy of consumption tax on luxury goods was
another method of fair taxation.
China began levying higher
customs duties on luxury items brought by travelers or mailed to
China from Jan. 1 this year, with the rate on golf clubs and
expensive watches tripling to 30 percent mirroring the 20 to
percent rise for cosmetics.
The move fits in well with the levy of consumption tax
on luxury goods such as luxury watches, golf clubs, yachts, and
wooden floor panels since April last year.
"Taxation is a major revenue redistribution tool. One
of our top priorities this year is to use tax policies to guide
consumption, facilitate energy conservation and environmental
protection and to uphold fairness and social justice," Xie
said.
(Xinhua News Agency January 25, 2007)
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