China's fiscal revenue up 13.3% in H1

Embed below code to your site

Photo taken on Jan. 14, 2021 shows a night view of Lujiazui in Pudong of east China's Shanghai Municipality. [Photo/Xinhua]

China's fiscal revenue increased 13.3 percent year on

year in the first six months of 2023, official data showed on Wednesday.

The country's fiscal revenue amounted to more than 11.9 trillion yuan (about 1.66 trillion U.S. dollars) during the period, according to the Ministry of Finance.

The central government collected approximately 5.39 trillion yuan in fiscal revenue, up 13.1 percent year on year, while local governments collected approximately 6.53 trillion yuan, up 13.5 percent from a year earlier.

Tax revenue came in at more than 9.9 trillion yuan in the January-June period, up 16.5 percent year on year.

Xue Xiaoqian, an official with the finance ministry, attributed the rapid expansion in fiscal revenue to the country's economic recovery as well as the large-scale implementation of tax refund policies since April last year, which created a lower comparison basis.

"The rebounding trend of the Chinese economy will provide significant support for future fiscal revenue increases," Xue told a press conference on Wednesday.

He, however, noted that with tax refunds back to normal level in the second half of 2022, the monthly growth will gradually slow down and become commensurate with the growth of the economic sources of taxation.

Fiscal spending rose 3.9 percent year on year to 13.39 trillion yuan during the six-month period, according to the ministry. More spending has gone into weak links and key areas of economic and social development such as people's livelihood, rural revitalization and education, Xue said.

发现了错别字? 请选中并且点击Ctrl+Enter发送!

 

 

孩子、家庭、社会。

登陆投稿

免费邮件订阅

输入您的电子邮件到下面的空格中,点击订阅,关注《海之子》的最新信息。