IANS | 02 May, 2016 China has replaced
all business tax with value-added tax (VAT) after extending the policy to cover
the construction, real estate, finance and consumer services sectors on Sunday.
They were the last four sectors still taxed based on their revenue.
VAT refers to a tax levied on the difference between a commodity's price before
taxes and its production cost. Revenue tax refers to a levy on a business's
gross revenues.
The expansion of the VAT scheme is expected to ease tax burdens by more than
500 billion yuan ($76.9 billion) this year.
China's service sector is increasingly picking up the slack of manufacturing as
the world's second-largest economy is shifting towards a more sustainable
growth driven chiefly by consumer demand.
Expanding VAT to more service sectors is also part of the supply-side
structural reforms authorities have been promising since last year to address
the structural imbalances in the Chinese economy.
The VAT scheme first started in 2012 as a pilot programme in Shanghai, covering
a number of services including transportation, IT and logistics. It was later
expanded nationwide and to cover other businesses.
Over the past four years, the VAT scheme has saved 640 billion yuan in taxes
for businesses.