Higher tax introduced on exports
21/5/2005 16:26
China will raise export taxes on 74 sorts of textile products, with a
400-percent hike for most of the products, on June 1, the Customs Tariff
Commission of the State Council announced yesterday. The announcement came
after the United States imposed quotas on imports of Chinese textiles. The
European Union also is pressing China to restrain the growth of its textile
exports. Tariffs will be raised on the 74 textile products from the 0.2 yuan
to 0.3 yuan per piece that has been charged since January 1, to 0.5 yuan to 4
yuan (48 US cents) per piece starting next month, according to the
announcement. The government will also start charging an export tax of 3 yuan
for every 1 kilogram of combed cotton yarn sold abroad. Currently, no export tax
is charged on combed cotton yarn. Most of the textile products to be affected
by the new tariff increase are exported to the United States and the European
Union, which include the seven kinds of products restricted by the United
States, according to the China National Textile and Apparel Council. The
council's Vice President Gao Yong said the Chinese government had made the
decision "independently and voluntarily" in a bid to curb the rapid development
of textile export, after listening to advises from Chinese textile companies and
chambers of commerce. Gao said his council had suggested the government
earlier that the tariff rate be raised by a modest margin, and the tariff hike
not affect too many products. According to the China Textile Industry
Council, Chinese textile companies would have to "make sacrifice" as a result of
the export tariff hike. Sun Huaibin, spokesman for the council, said that the
council understood the decision of the government, as "it is for the purpose of
helping establish a new world textile trade order and ease the trade
friction." The American Chamber of Commerce in China welcomed China's drastic
hike of the export tariffs, saying "this voluntary step demonstrates that China
is adopting a constructive approach and is sensitive to the very real hardships
which the removal of quotas has brought for some American workers." "We are
encouraged by this move that the United States and China may be able to resolve
other trade differences with a similar sense of fairness and moderation," said
Charlie Martin, president of the chamber. However, China Textile Industry
Council spokesman Sun said that the tariff hike would surely result in an
increase of cost and decrease of profits for domestic companies. Some companies
might sustain losses and textile workers might lose their jobs. "This is what
we don't want to see," said Sun. Chinese exporters said the export tax increase
will deal a big blow to their businesses and cause some small companies to shut
down. "The latest increase in export taxes will largely increase our costs
and hurt the company's profits," said Liu Ling, chairman of Jiangsu Soho
International Group Corp, a major apparel exporter. She said many small
companies won't be able to afford the higher taxes and will have to stop
exporting affected products. Zhang Peisen, head of a policy research group
under the State Administration of Taxation, said the government move, though
painful for Chinese manufacturers and workers, could also help the country's
textile sector readjust their export strategies and introduce more advanced
technology to increase the added value of their products.
Shanghai Daily/Xinhua
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