Channel NewsAsia - China announces tax cuts to help textile industry - channelnewsasia.com
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 
 

China announces tax cuts to help textile industry
Posted: 20 November 2008 1559 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


BEIJING : The Chinese government has announced a series of tax cuts aimed at helping the country's textile industry through the global financial crisis.

"Textiles are a traditional and an important industry in China," Prime Minister Wen Jiabao told a government meeting on Wednesday, according to a statement on the government's website.

Export tax rebates on textile products will be raised to 17 percent as part of the decision, the state-run 21st Century Business Herald newspaper reported Thursday. It did not say when the specifics of the hike would be announced.

The government said a tax cut would "reduce pressures on the cost of production," along with other measures to help exporters and the elimination of a variety of other unspecified taxes.

Beijing also plans to increase access to credit for small and medium-sized businesses in the textile sector and offer support for those wishing to modernise.

The same meeting decided to offer subsidies for farmers buying home appliances, in a bid to tap rural consumption potential.

"In recent months the textile industry has had to face a serious and unprecedented situation due to economic changes at home and abroad," the government statement said.

In the first quarter of this year, before the financial crisis truly started to unfold, exports of textiles and clothes fell by 11 percent to 81.86 billion dollars.

The drop has been blamed on increasing competition from other Asian countries and a rise in the value of the yuan, coupled with an increase in production costs.

The announcement of deeper tax rebates comes a month after China increased export tax rebates for the sector to 14 percent from 13 percent on more than a quarter of the goods in the Customs' tariff list.

China's labour-intensive manufacturing sectors have been hit by a combination of rising labour costs, rising materials costs and the appreciation of the Chinese currency, along with the downturn in demand from the ailing US.

- AFP /ls

 

 
Add Your Comments   View Comments ()
Name : E-mail:
Your views   (Max 600 chars)
word count:   more chars available.
........................................................................................................................................
Enter the code exactly as you see it.
I have read terms & conditions
  



Other business News
US retail sales unexpectedly rise 0.3% in February
Eurozone factory output surges in January
BOJ under pressure to loosen monetary policy
Bayer Schering sees great growth potential in Asia
British Airways cabin crew to strike in late March
Air China to raise over US$950m in share issue
Lehman failure fault of managers, banks, auditors: expert
Hyundai chairman's son gets seat on the board
China tells US not to "politicise" yuan policy
Air China to raise over US$950m in share issue
US household wealth jumps for first time since recession
Japan PM calls for "firm steps" against strong yen
Australia iron ore, coal exports hit record
BP wins foothold in Brazil with deal
BMW posts 36.5% drop in 2009 profit
Malaysia studying new regional trade pact with US
Samsung unveils world's first 3-D LED TV sets
Stolen Swiss bank data at HSBC hits 24,000 clients
China announces new measures to cool the property sector
Experts bullish about China's economic growth

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions