Governor says closure of ROK companies no major impact on east China province
10/3/2008 17:11
The recent closure of some companies with investment from the Republic of
Korea (ROK) does not have a major impact on local economy in east China's
Shandong Province, Governor Jiang Daming said on the sidelines of the country's
parliamentary session. "On the contrary, it will help improve our industrial
structure and the quality of local economy," said Jiang, also a deputy to the
11th National People's Congress. A number of ROK-invested companies have
closed down their China operations this year, leaving workers unpaid. In
Jiaozhou, a city close to Qingdao Port, 103 ROK-invested businesses have shut
down, without paying wages or taxes. "Most of these companies are small
plants," said Jiang. "It's natural for the investors to leave when they are not
able to make money in Beijing." He said the closures were mainly prompted by
a uniform business income tax that began to apply to Chinese and
foreign-invested companies this year. A new law taking effect on Jan. 1 sets
an unified income tax rate for domestic and foreign companies at 25
percent. Previously, the average income tax rate on Chinese companies was 25
percent, while that on foreign enterprises was 15 percent. Besides the higher
tax rate, ROK media pointed to China's rising labor costs and more restrictions
on pollution as factors behind the withdrawals.
Xinhua
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