China collected 898.8 billion (US$112.3 billion) in taxes in the
first quarter of this year, up 18.9 percent year-on-year, the State
Administration of Taxation reported Thursday
The figure, which excludes revenues from custom tariffs and the
farming sector, represents an increase of 142.9 billion yuan over
the same period of last year.
The administration attributed the steady increase of taxes to
the country's rapid economic development.
Strict taxation enforcement also played a part, it said.
According to the administration, taxes from the country's
economically-developed eastern part went up 19.3 percent, those
from the central part increased by 18 percent, and the taxes from
the less developed western part went up by 13.78 percent. Tax
revenues from the eastern, central and western regions account for
70.5 percent, 15.7 percent and 13.7 percent of the country's total,
respectively.
(Xinhua News Agency April 7, 2006)