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Tariff
cut to boost foreign trade
China says
it will cut the import tariffs to an average of 12 per cent
in 2002 from the current 15.3 per cent to fulfill its World
Trade Organization (WTO) commitments.
The country
will cut import tariffs on industrial products to 11.6 per
cent starting January 1, the Ministry of Finance said Tuesday
when China officially became a WTO member.
The country
will also cut import tariffs on farm products to 15.8 per
cent, the ministry said, without giving the current level
of duties.
The tariffs
on textiles will fall to 17.6 per cent; on electronics to
10.7 per cent; and on machinery products to 9.6 per cent,
the ministry said.
China
has already cut tariffs five times between 1992 and 1999,
lowering the average import tariff level from 43 per cent
to 17 per cent.
It also
promised to drop its tariff level to 10 per cent by 2005.
The average
tariff level of all WTO members is now about 6 per cent. It
stands at 3 per cent in developed countries and 10 per cent
in developing ones.
Economists
said the tariffs cut is "necessary,'' because China has
yet to integrate itself into the international market.
"The
cut in the import tariffs will be beneficial to further expanding
China's foreign trade, especially imports,'' said Li Jingwen,
an economist with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
More imports
only mean more tariffs, Li said.
"The
tariff cut will not have much effect on China's fiscal revenue
and the country's sound economic development,'' he said.
He said
China's fiscal system is strong enough to deal with any further
tariff cuts in the coming years.
State
Administration of Taxation figures indicate that China's tax
revenues -- excluding those from customs duties and agriculture
taxes -- reached 1.3 trillion Yuan (US$151 billion) during
the first 10 months of this year, a year-on-year increase
of 21.1 per cent.
"China's
WTO accession will further stimulate the national economy,
which will give more resources to the taxation administration,''
Li said.
An earlier
report from the academy predicted that in 2002, the growth
rate of the gross domestic product (GDP) would be around 7
per cent to 8 per cent or even higher than the 7.5 per cent
predicted for 2001 if no major global crisis occurred.
"A
growth in GDP stemming from the WTO entry will naturally lead
to more tax revenue,'' Li said.
And because
an increasing number of foreign companies will invest in China
in the coming years, the country will collect more company
and individual income taxes, Li said.
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