Finance Minister denies 300b yuan govt spending of public funds
Updated: 2015-03-06 11:42
(Xinhua/chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||
China's Minister of Finance Lou Jiwei (center) takes questions from journalists at a news conference during the ongoing two sessions in Beijing, March 6, 2015. [Li Xiang / chinadaily.com.cn] |
According to the report, the ministry will continue to implement proactive fiscal policy in 2015, as appropriate, increase the intensity. The ministry will increase the deficit by an appropriate amount and put to use funds carried over from previous years to increase the intensity of spending.
Government deficit for 2015 is projected to be 1.62 trillion yuan nationwide, an increase of 270 billion yuan over last year, with increases in both the central and the local government deficit, the report said.
The ministry will implement structural tax cuts and reductions to fees across the board to strengthen our support for the real economy as well as strengthen efforts to make use of existing government funds. The government investments will be kept at a certain scale, and make good use of the guiding role of such investments.
- Across America over the week (from Feb 27 to March 5)
- Living amid the mountains
- Plane skids off LaGuardia runway during snowstorm in NYC
- The Legend of Mulan told at Lincoln Center
- Six things you may not know about Awakening of Insects
- Top 10 favorite gift brands of rich Chinese men
- Buddha statue with mummified monk is museum draw
- Across Canada March 4
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Spring Festival trends reflect a changing China |
Patent applications lead the world |
BC lures Chinese tourists |
Festival Special: Apps that make holiday shopping easier |
Alibaba places China smartphone business bet with $590m Meizu deal |
Today's Top News
Birthing centers mum after raid in California
4 Chinese students look to take 'risk'
China likely to maintain 7% growth for 20 years
China's top two train makers to merge
Finance Minister: no spending spree
US fails to grasp China's terror laws
Militaries' cooperation 'key' in ties
China, California address climate, energy issues
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |