日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

BIZCHINA> Center
Transfer payments set to rise
By Xin Zhiming (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-04-17 09:41

The government is poised to pump in more money and adopt more favorable taxation policies to narrow the income and wealth gaps among people in different regions, senior fiscal officials said yesterday.

"We will increase the volume of transfer payments to ease fiscal difficulties of grassroots governments," Ding Xuedong, vice-minister of finance, told the 2008 Forum on Fiscal Reform in China.

In 2006, China scrapped the 2,000-year-old agricultural tax and other farming-related taxes, reducing the tax burden on farmers to the tune of 50 billion yuan ($7.14 billion) annually. But grassroots governments have suffered as a result, because these revenues constituted the bulk of their fiscal income.

Some economists estimate that governments at and below the county level have accumulated about 1 trillion yuan in debts.

In the coming years, the country will earmark more funds for rural development, Ding said at the two-day forum, which was themed on pro-poor fiscal reforms and capacity building in China.

The gap between the rich and the poor and between the eastern and western regions are widening, said Liu Shangxi, deputy director of the Research Institute for Fiscal Science.

According to the World Bank's World Development Report, China's Gini coefficient in 2006 was 0.47, crossing the internationally accepted warning line of 0.4. The gap in purchasing power is even larger, with consumption by the poor and in the less developed regions disproportionately weak, Liu said.

The weak purchasing power of more than 700 million farmers out of the country's 1.3 billion people has affected the drive to boost domestic demand and reduce dependence on exports, analysts said.

Subinay Nandy, country director of the United Nations Development Program in China, warned that such income and wealth gaps could lead to human development gaps.

"Recent data in China confirm that development gaps have emerged that go beyond income and consumption; wide gaps can be found in key human development dimensions such as health and education," he said in a paper prepared for the forum.

Ding said the country is planning to "accelerate" the pace of adjusting income distribution and more funds would be put in the rural economy.

"(We will also) increase support for charity and actively encourage development of the cause to direct social wealth distribution in a way that is conducive to fair distribution," Wang Li, deputy head of the State Administration of Taxation, told the forum.

China's taxation laws do not provide exemptions for corporate donations to charities. Analysts said this has dampened corporate donations.

Nandy said what China spends in sectors such as education and health is too low compared with its colossal GDP.


(For more biz stories, please visit Industries)

 

 

主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产精品久久久久永久免费看 | 高清乱码免费看污 | 少妇视频一区二区 | 国产黄色免费网站 | 欧美另类日韩 | 国产视频手机在线 | 亚洲人人精品 | 色综合天天操 | 天天爽天天做 | 国产高清色 | 一级久久久久 | 国产性精品 | 日日狠狠久久偷偷四色综合免费 | 日韩一区二区三区不卡 | 人人干人人干 | 亚洲精品在线免费 | 国产九九 | 性欧美videos | 91视频在线免费 | 伊人影院久久 | 精品久久a | 亚洲高清视频在线播放 | 一区二区的视频 | 色网免费| 天天射日日操 | 999久久精品 | 蜜乳av一区二区 | 国产人成在线 | 成人片在线播放 | 黄色a免费| 91成人在线观看喷潮蘑菇 | 色五婷婷 | 美女一区二区视频 | 国产一级做a爱片久久毛片a | 国产麻豆免费视频 | 叶玉卿三级| 欧美一区二区三区不卡 | 五月婷婷国产 | 国产性hd| 你懂的免费在线观看 | 久久福利网站 |