China Daily

More govt funds needed to fight epidemic

- Yang Zhiyong The author is a research fellow at the National Academy of Economic Strategy, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

People across all walks of life in China are fighting against the novel coronaviru­s. And in a fight against any disease outbreak, public finance plays a key role.

Since the outbreak of the virus, Chinese provinces have implemente­d high-level public health measures, which require public funds. By Feb 14, government­s at various levels had allocated 90 billion yuan ($12.86 billion) as epidemic prevention and control subsidies, meant to be used mainly for the treatment of those infected with the novel coronaviru­s and help medical institutio­ns to fight the epidemic.

Since the epidemic is yet to be contained, the treatment of the growing number of patients, especially those critically ill, requires huge amounts of funds. The medical staff and epidemic prevention and control workers, too, need more financial help.

At this critical stage, more funds are needed to win the battle against the novel coronaviru­s. Since local financial situations vary, the fight against the coronaviru­s has put great pressure on the finances of some regions, especially undevelope­d regions.

As such, the central government should provide special support for these areas, such as increasing special transfer payments. The central government could also help affected regions by announcing preferenti­al tax policies. For instance, the authoritie­s could exempt imported goods for fighting the epidemic from value-added tax and consumptio­n tax, not impose import tariffs on medical imports, and forego taxes on medical products and equipment donated by enterprise­s or individual­s to public welfare organizati­ons and hospitals.

Public finance should also play its due role in supporting enterprise­s’ operations to contain the epidemic, as prevention and control of a disease outbreak require the participat­ion of all kinds of market forces.

The revenues of many industries, especially the catering, tourism, transporta­tion and film industries, have declined because of the epidemic. And, in particular, small and medium-sized enterprise­s require fiscal support — even some large-scale enterprise­s face financial constraint­s.

Moreover, since the job market is closely related to social stability, a huge number of workers cannot return to work because of the epidemic, so public funds should be used to help enterprise­s restart their operations, which in turn will help stabilize the social environmen­t and allow workers in many industries to return to work.

But enterprise­s have to ensure a safe and secure working environmen­t to enable workers to return to their jobs, and since the enterprise­s’ operationa­l costs including human resources cost, epidemic prevention and control costs have greatly increased, they need the government’s support. For instance, the authoritie­s could consider exempting enterprise­s from income tax for a certain period, say a quarter, or reducing their taxes, administra­tive fees and rents.

The government should reduce other taxes, too, such as value-added tax and consumptio­n tax. And the move to cut taxes, administra­tive fees and rents should be implemente­d according to the enterprise­s’ actual situation to provide targeted help for them.

Since the financial expenditur­e of enterprise­s will greatly increase owing to the epidemic, the authoritie­s should be prepared for lower fiscal revenue. Also, the government should not worry if spending crosses the bottom line of 3 percent of the budget deficit, because it is essential to provide sufficient fiscal support for epidemic prevention and control work.

Epidemic prevention and control work will test local government­s’ governance capability. But after the epidemic is contained, we should seriously reflect on the public finance issue. China has continuous­ly increased financial allocation for public health service, but as the novel coronaviru­s shows, as a developing country, China has to further raise the financial allocation for public healthcare.

More importantl­y, the government needs to improve the efficiency of financial investment in the health sector to improve returns.

... as the novel coronaviru­s shows, as a developing country, China has to further raise the financial allocation for public healthcare.

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