Book contents
- China’s Public Finance
- Endorsement on Back Cover
- China’s Public Finance
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- About the Author
- 1 An Overview of China’s Public Finance
- 2 The Fall and Rise of Government Revenue
- 3 Value-Added Tax, Consumption Tax, and Other Taxes on Goods and Services
- 4 Individual Income Tax Reforms
- 5 Corporate Income Tax in China
- 6 The Size and Structure of Government Expenditure
- 7 Infrastructure Development and Financing
- 8 Social Security Reforms
- 9 Healthcare Reforms
- 10 China’s Growing Local Government Debt
- 11 Fiscal Relationship between the Central and Local Governments
- 12 Fiscal Reform for Equitable and Sustainable Growth
- References
- Name Index
- Subject Index
1 - An Overview of China’s Public Finance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2022
- China’s Public Finance
- Endorsement on Back Cover
- China’s Public Finance
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- About the Author
- 1 An Overview of China’s Public Finance
- 2 The Fall and Rise of Government Revenue
- 3 Value-Added Tax, Consumption Tax, and Other Taxes on Goods and Services
- 4 Individual Income Tax Reforms
- 5 Corporate Income Tax in China
- 6 The Size and Structure of Government Expenditure
- 7 Infrastructure Development and Financing
- 8 Social Security Reforms
- 9 Healthcare Reforms
- 10 China’s Growing Local Government Debt
- 11 Fiscal Relationship between the Central and Local Governments
- 12 Fiscal Reform for Equitable and Sustainable Growth
- References
- Name Index
- Subject Index
Summary
This overview first discusses some traditional thoughts on public finance, particularly the thought of implicit taxation, which have had a profound influence on the behavior of the Chinese government historically and currently. It then describes public finance under the centrally planned economic system, followed by an examination of market-oriented public finance reforms before exploring the challenges to China’s public finance. Finally it explains the contributions of this book. By the end of 1956, China completed the “socialist economic reforms,” turning all large- and medium-sized private enterprises into SOEs and small private enterprises into collectively-owned-enterprises. In 1958, the government took back the land previously allocated to farmers and established the people’s communes.Another economic reform started in 1978, allowing private enterprises to develop and allowing farmers to grow whatever they like on the land allocated to them. A modern tax system and a social insurance system were established and local governments have been given some fiscal freedom. However, there are still problems with public finance.
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- Information
- China's Public FinanceReforms, Challenges, and Options, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022