23/08/2016 05:17 AST

China’s cabinet has unveiled detailed plans to lower business costs in the next several years, the latest steps to cushion an economic slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.

Authorities aim to cut financing and labour costs, energy and logistics costs as well as reduce the annual tax burden for firms over the next few years, according to guidance published on a government website on Monday.

China is looking to achieve “’a reasonable decline’ in the overall cost for firms in the real economy in about three years”, the cabinet said, adding that the measures will help “effectively cope with the downward pressure on the economy”.

Companies have been complaining about rising wages and land prices, in addition to tighter environmental and safety regulations, and some foreign manufacturers have moved to neighbouring countries to cut costs.

“Cutting costs will help improve firms’ ability to cope with the impact of economic slowdown, shorten the period of economic adjustments and allow the economy to enter a new cycle,” said Li Huiyong, an economist at Shenyin & Wanguo Securities.

The central bank would maintain ample liquidity in the banking system while keeping an appropriate monetary and financial environment, stepping up support for small firms via differentiated reserve requirement ratios, relending and rediscount, the cabinet said.

Banks will reasonably price their loans and will be barred from linking firms’ loan applications with deposits and charging “irregular” fees, according to the cabinet’s guidance.

It added that banks should also step up bad loan disposal. The government will develop equity financing, appropriately expand the size of corporate bond issuance and allow selected firms to conduct debt-to-equity swaps, the cabinet said.

China has already moved to lower labour costs for firms by cutting their pension contributions in some provinces, it said.

The government will also relax controls on energy prices in some sectors to reflect market supply and demand, it said.


The Gulf Today

Ticker Price Volume
JARIR 177.89 111,251
RIBL 13.83 1,519,548
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Index Closing Change
NIKKEI 225 21,292.29 -96.29 (-0.45%)
DAX 12,002.45 -94.28 (-0.77%)
S&P 500 2,614.45 32.57 (1.26%)
Global markets down on trade war worries

05/04/2018

Stock markets recoiled on Wednesday as China retaliated in an escalating trade war with the United States, leaving investors reluctant to take positions in anything but the safest of assets.

The Gulf Today

Egypt to meet investors this week ahead of euro-denominated bond

04/04/2018

Egypt will start meeting bond investors in Europe this week ahead of a potential euro-denominated bond issue, a document from one of the banks appointed to arrange the meetings showed on Tuesday.

Gulf News

Foreign investment in France hit 10-year high last year

04/04/2018

Foreign investment in France rose 16 per cent in 2017 to levels not seen for a decade as President Emmanuel Macron’s (pictured) bid to attract money from abroad gains pace, a government report said o

Oman Daily Observer

Japan's economy a tricky one to understand

03/04/2018

Explaining Japan’s economy to foreign audiences is hard.
One big reason for this is that explaining something as large and complex as a $5 trillion economy is an inherently difficult task - the

The National

China raises import duties on US products

03/04/2018

China raised import duties on a $3 billion list of US meat, apples and other products on Monday in an escalating dispute with Washington over trade and industrial policy.

The government of

The Gulf Today