BEIJING — China’s value-added tax (VAT) reform, a key part of supply-side economic reform, has given impetus to economic growth and boosted entrepreneurship.
The VAT reform, which replaced all business taxes with value-added tax, was first piloted in Shanghai in 2012. It was expanded nationwide from May 1, 2016, with construction, real estate, financial and consumer services sectors included in the VAT regime.
Tangible goods have been subject to VAT for some time, but the levy on services was imposed on the value of a firm’s sales. Such a crude system resulted in a tax on tax. VAT avoids this, as it is applied to the value added at each link in the production chain.
China’s VAT rate structure was further cut from four to three tiers (6 percent, 11 percent and 17 percent) starting from July 2017, with tax rates for farm produce, tap water and books reduced from 13 to 11 percent.
Statistics from the Ministry of Finance showed that the reform has so far saved more than 1.6 trillion yuan ($244 billion) in taxes for businesses since 2012. From May 2016 to June 2017, taxes were reduced by over 850 billion yuan.
However, a lighter tax burden is not the central government’s only aim, or it could have just cut business tax rates. An across-the-board replacement with VAT has far more significance on China’s economic development.
Expanding VAT reform across all industries will encourage the development of the service sector, support an industry upgrade, stimulate consumption and support supply-side structural reform.
“The reform has streamlined the tax system, reduced double taxation and broken taxation barriers between manufacturing and service sectors to increase the weight of the service sector in China’s economy,” said Hu Genrong, a senior tax consultant with the PricewaterhouseCoopers.
China is counting on services, particularly high value-added services in finance and technology, to lessen the economy’s traditional reliance on heavy industry and investment.