Water usage should be taxed, and the tax structure for oil, natural gas and
coal be reformed to favor conservation, lawmakers said.
The Financial and
Economic Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC) included the
suggestion in its review of the government budgets proposed by the Ministry of
Finance during the annual NPC national session.
The committee did not
offer any suggestions about how the water tax would be levied, but analysts
agreed that it could be part of a fee-to-tax reform for usage.
In its
current form, the rate covers a water fee, resource fee and waste-water
treatment fee.
"The move will regulate water use through taxation and
promote the economical use of this resource," said Han Meng, a researcher at the
Institute of Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
(CASS).
The committee also suggested that the system for taxing oil,
natural gas and coal be reformed. Taxes on these resources are levied according
to the amount of production. For example, coal-mines are taxed according to
their output.
The committee said this system should be changed so that
taxes reflect the prices of those resources.
In recent years, the prices
of energy resources like oil have soared while China's resource tax has remained
largely unchanged. The resource tax on oil, for example, did not change until
2005, when it was raised to 14-30 yuan ($1.8-3.9) per ton from 12-14 yuan
($1.5-1.8) per ton.
"The suggested change will better reflect the market
value of the resource," said Han.
Resource-rich provinces have been
advocating a resource tax reform that would revalue the prices of
resources.
"The new system, if approved, will help save resources through
economic means," said Han.
The national policy advisors at the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), meanwhile, said more
attention should be paid to the interests of resource-rich provinces, which
provide the raw materials that fuel the national economy, but "have not been
adequately rewarded".
Cai Jiming, a member of the CPPCC, told his fellow
delegates that more revenue from resource taxes should stay in local coffers to
help develop the economies of these provinces, which are largely in the
economically backward western region.
In its report, the NPC committee
also said "the plan for levying a tax on house ownership is being
studied".
The Ministry of Construction is also mulling the introduction
of a property tax, according to its vice-minister, Liu Zhifeng.
While it
is necessary to levy such a tax, the government must be cautious to ensure that
poor people's interests are not damaged, said Liu Xiahui, a researcher at the
CASS.
"Not all houses should be taxed," he said. "Those owned by the
low-income earners should be exempt."
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