Explanatory Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
Government Revenue refers to the
revenue of the government finance by means of participating in the distribution
of the social products, which is the financial resources for ensuring the
government to function. The contents of government revenue have been changed
several times. Now it includes the following main items:
(1) Various tax revenues, including value
added tax, business tax, consumption tax, land value added tax, tax on city
maintenance and construction, resources tax, tax on use of urban land,
enterprise income tax, personal income tax, tariff, stamp tax on security
transactions, tax on purchase of motor vehicles, tax on agriculture and animal
husbandry and tax on occupancy of cultivated land, etc.
(2) Special revenues, including revenues
from the fee on sewage treatment, fee on urban water resources, fee for the
compensation of mineral resources and extra-charges for education, etc.
(3) Other revenues, including revenue from
interest, revenue from the repayment of capital construction loan, revenue from
capital construction projects, and donations and
grants.
(4) Subsidies for the losses of the
state-owned enterprises. This is an item of negative revenue, consisting of
subsidies to industrial, commercial and grain purchasing and supply
enterprises.
Government Expenditure refers to the distribution and use of the
funds the government finance has raised, so as to meet the needs of economic
construction and various causes. It includes the following main items:
(1) Expenditure for capital construction: It
refers to the non-gratuitous use and appropriation of funds for capital
construction in the range of capital construction, outlay of capital as well as
the loans on capital construction approved by the government for special
purpose or policy purpose and the expenditure with discount paid in an overall
way within the amount of the funds appropriated to the departments for capital
construction.
(2) Innovation funds of the enterprises:
They refer to the funds appropriated from the government budget for the
enterprises to tap the latent power, upgrade the technology and carry out
innovation, including the innovation fund of the departments, loan of the
enterprises for innovation, subsidies on the innovation of the small fertilizer
plant, small cement plant, small coal mines, small machinery plant and small
steel plant, the expenditure of interest for the loan for innovation.
(3) Geological prospecting expenses: They
refer to the expenses appropriated from the government budget to the geological
prospecting units for the expenditure of the prospecting work, including the
expenditures of the administrative agencies for geological prospecting and
their institutional units as well as the geological prospecting expenditure.
(4) expenditures
for science and technology promotion: They refer to the expenses appropriated
from the government budget for the scientific and technological expenditure,
including new products development expenditure, expenditure for intermediate
trial and subsidies on important scientific researches.
(5) Expenditure for supporting rural
production: It refers to the expenditures appropriated from the government
budget for supporting the various expenditures of the rural collective units or
households for production, including the subsidies to the small water
conservancy projects and well drilling, sprinkling irrigation projects run by
the villages; subsidies on the rural water and soil conserving measures;
subsidies to the small power stations run by the villages; subsidies to the
expenditure for fighting against particularly severe draughts; subsidies on the
rural waste land exclamation; fund for supporting the township enterprises;
fund for supporting rural cooperative production organizations, subsidies to
the expenditure for popularization of the agricultural technologies and plant
protection in the rural areas; subsidies to the expenditure for the protection
of grasslands and cattle and fowls; subsidies on afforestation
and forest protection in rural areas; subsidies on the rural aquatic products
industry; special fund for developing grain production.
(6) Operating expenses of the departments of
farming, forestry, water conservancy and meteorology etc.: They refer to the
expenses appropriated from the government budget for the expenditures of
agricultural exclamation, farms, agriculture, animal husbandry, agricultural
machinery, forestry, timber industry, water conservancy, aquatic products
industry, meteorology, technology popularization in township enterprises,
popularization (demonstration) of improved varieties, plant (cattle and fowls,
forest) protection, water quality monitoring, prospecting and designing,
resources investigation, cadres training, subsidies to horticulture gardens,
expenditure of specialized secondary schools, subsidies on the experiments of
sowing herbage seeds by flights, expenditures of afforestation
agencies and meteorology agencies, expenses for fishery administration and
operating expenses for agricultural administration, etc.
(7) Operating expenses of the departments of
industry, transport and commerce: They refer to the expenses appropriated from
the government budget to cover the expenditure on salaries and operational
expenditure of the departments of industry, transport and commerce for the
expenditure of business development, including expenses for prospecting and
designing, expenditures of specialized secondary schools, expenditures of the
technical training schools and expenditures for cadres training, etc.
(8) Operating expenses of the
departments of culture, education, science and public health: They refer to the
expenses appropriated from the government budget for the expenditures on
salaries and operational expenditure of the causes of culture, publication,
cultural relics, education, public health, traditional Chinese medical science,
free medical services, sports, archives, earthquake, ocean, communications,
broadcasting, film and television, family planning; expenditure for training of
cadres of government, party and mass organization; expenditures for natural
sciences, social sciences, associations for science and technology and the
special expenditure for the high-tech researches. They include mainly wages,
extra wages, welfare funds, pension for the retirees, stipend, expenses for official business, expenses for equipment
purchases, expenses for repairs, business expenses and subsidies to the units
which are unable to support their expenditures by their own earnings.
(9) Pension for the disabled or for the
families of the bereaved and relief funds for social welfare: They refer to the
funds appropriated from the government budget for the expenditures of pension
for the disabled or for the families of the bereaved and relief funds for
social welfare, including the lump-sum or regular pension paid by the
departments of civil affairs to the members of martyrs families and families of
those who died for the public interest, pension to the revolutionary disabled,
subsidies for permanent disability of various kinds, subsidies to the military
martyrs dependents and the demobilized servicemen, expenditure for settling
down the demobilized servicemen, operating expenses of the consoling
institutions, expenses for management and repair of the commemorative buildings
for the martyrs, the expenses managed by the departments of civil affairs for
the retirees and those who have quitted their work, expenses for social relief
in rural and urban areas, operating expenses for providing relief to the areas
of natural calamity and subsidies on the reconstruction after the particularly
severe natural calamities, etc.
(10) Expenditure on retirees: It refers to
the expenditure on retirees of government agencies and institutions that are
covered by the state budget.
(11) Expenses on subsidies to social
security system: It refers to expenditure from the state budget for subsidies
to social security system, including subsidies to the social insurance fund,
subsidies to promoting employment, subsidies to laid-off workers of state-owned
enterprises, supplement to national social security funds, etc.
(12) Expenditures for national defence: They refer to the security, including expenses of
national defence, expenses of scientific researches
on national defence, expenses for building up peoples militia and expenditure for special projects, etc.
(13) Administrative expenses: They include
expenditure for administration, subsidies to the parties and mass
organizations, diplomatic expenditure, expenditure for public security,
judicial expenditure, law court expenditure, procuratorial
expenditure and subsidies to the expenses for treating the cases by the public
security departments, procuratorial organs and law
courts.
(14) Expenditure on policy-related
subsidies: It refers to the expenditure appropriated, with the approval of the
government, from the state budget for price subsidies on such products as
grain, cotton and edible oil. More specifically, it includes subsidies to the
difference between the selling prices and purchasing prices of grains, cotton
and edible oil, subsidies for curtaining prices and for sugar reserve,
subsidies to the difference between the selling prices and purchasing prices of
means pf agricultural production, risk fund for grains, risk fund for
non-staple food, risk fund for local production of coal, etc.
(15) Expenditure on interest of debts: It
refers to expenses from the state budget on paying interest of domestic and
foreign debts.
Revenue of the central government and
revenue of the local governments: refers to the revenue of the
central government and that of the local governments as defined by the
decentralized taxation system starting from 1994. In accordance with this
system, the revenue of the central government includes tariff, consumption tax
and value added tax levied by the customs, consumption tax, income tax of the
enterprises subordinate to the central government, income taxes of the local
banks, foreign-funded banks and non-bank financial institutions, business tax
and profits of railways, head offices of banks, head office of insurance
company , which are handed over to the government in a centralized way, tax on
city maintenance and construction, tax on purchasing motor vehicles, tonnage
tax of ships, 75% of the value added tax, 94% of the tax on stock dealing
(stamp tax), interest income tax in the personal income tax, proportion of the
personal income tax (other that interest income tax) to be shared by the
central government, and tax on ocean petroleum resources,. The revenue of the
local governments includes business tax, income tax of the enterprises
subordinate to the local government, proportion of the personal income tax
(other that interest income tax) to be shared by the central government, tax on
the use of urban land, tax on the adjustment of the investment in fixed assets,
tax on town maintenance and construction, tax on real estates, tax on the use
of vehicles and ships, stamp tax, slaughter tax, tax on agriculture and animal
husbandry, tax on special agricultural products, tax on the occupancy of
cultivated land, contract tax, value-added tax on land, income from charges on
use of state-owned land, 25% of the value added tax, 6% of the tax on stock
dealing (stamp tax) and tax on resources other than the ocean petroleum
resources.
Expenditure of the central government and
expenditure of the local governments: according to
the different functions of the central government and local governments in the
economic and social activities, the rights of affairs administration are
classified between the central government and local governments; and the
classification of the expenditure between the central government and local
governments are made on the basis of the classification of the rights of
affairs administration between them. The expenditure of the central government
includes the expenditure for national defence,
expenditure for armed police forces, the administrative expenses and various
operating expenses at the level of central government, expenditure for key
projects and the expenditure of the central government for adjusting the
national economic structure, coordinating the development among different
regions and exercising the macro-economic regulation and control. The
expenditure of the local governments includes mainly the administrative expenses
and various operating expenses at the level of local governments, the
expenditure for capital construction and technological innovation with the
funds raised by the local government, expenditure for supporting rural
production, expenditure for city maintenance and construction and expenditure
for price subsidies, etc.
Extra-budgetary revenue and expenditure
Extra-budgetary fund refers to financial fund of various types not covered by
the regular government budgetary management, which is collected, allocated or
arranged by government agencies, institutions and social organizations while
performing duties delegated to them or on behalf of the government in
accordance with laws, rules and regulations. It mainly covers following items:
administrative and institutional fees, governmental funds and extra charges
that are stipulated by laws and regulations; administrative and institutional
fees approved by the State Council and provincial governments and their
financial and planning (price management) departments; governmental funds and
extra charges established by the State Council and the Ministry of Finance;
funds turned over to competent departments by their subordinate institutions;
self-raised and collected funds by township governments for their own expenditure;
and other financial funds that are not covered in budgetary management. Social
security funds are treated as extra-budget fund and managed for its exclusive
use, given the circumstance that separate government budgetary system for
social security is yet to be designed. Special accounts are opened by the
financial departments in banks for the management of revenue and expenditure of
extra-budgetary fund. Extra-budgetary revenue and expenditure is managed
separately, namely, revenue of institutions and departments must enter into the
special accounts of the financial departments at the same administrative level,
and their extra-budgetary expenditure is arranged in line with the extra-budget
plans and appropriated from these accounts.
Revenue
from debts refers to fund raised by the
state in credit forms, including various domestic government bonds issued by
the Ministry of Finance to commercial banks and other investors, bonds in
foreign currencies issued by the Ministry of Finance at the international
capital market, and other foreign debts borrowed and to be repaid centrally by
the government finance.
Expenditure on repayment of principal of
debts refers to the expenditure
from government finance on the repayment of principal of domestic and foreign
debts.
Deficit of central government finance
refers
to the difference between the total expenditure and the total revenue of the
central government.