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BEIJING - China's fiscal income hit a record 10.37 trillion yuan ($1.64 trillion) in 2011, 25 percent higher than in the previous year, the Ministry of Finance said on Friday.
Experts suggested the fast-growing revenue would allow more room for tax cuts this year and finance a fiscal stimulus to help the world's second-largest economy avoid a hard landing.
According to a statement on the website of the Ministry of Finance, nationwide fiscal revenue jumped 24.8 percent in 2011 year-on-year, with tax revenue contributing 8.97 trillion yuan.
Full-year fiscal expenditure was 10.89 trillion yuan, an increase of 21.2 percent from 2010, leaving the country with a fiscal deficit of 519 billion yuan, or 1.1 percent of its GDP.
The strong growth in 2011 revenue, much higher than the budgeted 8 percent, was attributed to China's economic gains, surging prices and corporate profits, the ministry said.
Revenue from corporate income taxes rose 30.5 percent in 2011, while value-added taxes and tariffs also rose rapidly.
Personal income taxes jumped 25 percent in 2011, but the ministry noted that revenue from personal income tax fell 5.5 percent in the last quarter of the year after the tax threshold was raised on Sept 1.
The growth in fiscal revenue also slowed over the year, from 33 percent in the first quarter to 10 percent in the fourth, as economic expansion moderated and inflation eased.
Some analysts warned that the slower increase may pose a challenge to the government's plans for further tax cuts and aggressive fiscal stimulus spending.
A stimulus on the scale of the 4 trillion yuan package in 2008, implemented to counter the global financial meltdown, will not be repeated, but China needs to maintain a fiscal deficit on a certain level as spending demand rises in a number of areas, said Liu Shangxi, deputy head of the research institute for fiscal science affiliated to the finance ministry.




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