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China's Glass Tycoon Cao Dewang ‘Escapes’ to the US for Cheaper Taxes

Categories: East Asia, China, Economics & Business
Cao Dewang from Chinese state-owned Central Television's Weibo. [1]

Cao Dewang from Chinese state-owned Central Television's Weibo.

Recently, Cao Dewang, a billionaire who makes his fortune by making glass, decided to make a more than US$1 billion investment and open a factory in a suburb of Dayton in Ohio. He's just one of several Chinese manufacturers who have opted to invest in the US because of the country's friendly tax code and cheap land prices.

As the economy is slowing down in China, the move has been perceived as a warning signal, and his complaints over heavy manufacturing taxes have been circulating on major Chinese social media platforms. The phrase “Cao Dewang has escaped” has even become a hot topic, echoing the concerns of China's economic elite over the manufacturing slump.

Cao Dewang told China Business Network in an interview [2] that “the tax burden for manufacturers in China is 35% higher than in the US” when explaining his decision to invest 600 million yuan in the US, including taking over a former General Motors plant. Cao’s Fuyao Group investment was announced after President-elect Donald Trump threatened to slap 45 percent punitive tariffs on Chinese imports to protect American jobs.

The Chinese government has made reforms to its tax code in recent years, promoting them as a tax-cutting move that would reduce burdens on businesses. But according to Cao, tax rates are still high, making profits in manufacturing “very thin.”

Cao Shanshi, a well-known commentator on popular social media site Weibo, cited the glass tycoon's main points [3] in his status update:

曹德旺今晚连线媒体,说了很有价值的几点:1、中国制造业的综合税负比美国高35%;2、问题主要就出在增值税上;3、中国劳动力不比俄罗斯、波兰、中欧成本低;4、房地产过热使得中国制造业丧失劳动力优势;5、说这些是为了提醒政府,也提醒企业家,提醒大家危机感,告诉大家要小心。

Cao Dewang delivered valuable points: 1. China's comprehensive taxes on manufacturing are 35% higher than in the US; 2. The problem mainly results from value-added tax; 3. China's labor is no longer cheaper than that in Russia, Poland and central Europe. 4. Overheating in the housing market has caused China's factories to loose its labor cost edge; 5. He wanted to remind the government and entrepreneurs of the risks and tell them to be careful.

Liu Shengjun, an economist and advocate for deeper tax reform, also applauded [4] Cao Dewang’s views:

【玻璃大王曹德旺:中国制造业综合税务比美国高35%】美国没有增值税,只有40%所得税;美国土地基本不要钱;能源方面,美国电价是中国一半,天然气只有中国的1/5;劳动力成本方面,美国蓝领是中国8倍,白领是中国的2倍多。算起来,在美国生产玻璃会多赚百分之十几

China’s glass magnate Cao Dewang: China’s comprehensive taxes on manufacturing are 35% higher than in the US. America only has 40% income tax, it does not have value-added tax; Basically, a company doesn’t need to pay for the land in America; as for energy, electricity prices in the US are half the price in China, natural gas prices are just one-fifth of China; about labor costs, blue collar wages in the US are eight times higher than in China, and white collar wages two times higher than in China. In sum, producing glass in America could earn more than 10%.

Since the current administration took office in 2012, the Chinese government has launched a value-added tax reform to reduce taxes on private companies and made further promise to loosen up regulations on businesses. However, many businessmen have complained that there hasn't been any real tax cuts; meanwhile, the country’s tax revenues have kept growing at a pace faster than gross domestic product (GDP) growth.

Zong Qinghou, China’s beverage king and one of China’s richest billionaires, also recently complained about rising taxes and costs to real economy enterprises, or those that produce goods and services, during an economic seminar held by online news portal Netease. Liu Shengjun summed up Zong's view [5] on Weibo:

宗庆后:当前做实体经济税费比较高、利润率很低,导致一些企业生存不下去,很多人不愿意干实体经济。今年的费的部分跟去年的费相比没有任何下降。而且有的费还增加了,特别是环保费增加太多。现在工业用地也需要几十万、上百万一亩,这么大的投资成本谁敢去投?而且水电气都是国有的垄断企业,用水电气、建设工厂都需要高额的费用,审批的不少环节还需要花不少钱;请第三方评估出报告,环评、能评、清洁生产等等一系列审批都要费用。面对如此高的投资成本,如果企业对盈利又没把握,谁还敢贸然投资。

China’s taxes and costs to the real economy are so high and profits are so low that some companies can’t survive and many businessmen are unwilling to do real economy. Charges have never dropped this year; instead some charges are increasing, especially the environmental protection charges, which are rising too much. One mu (about 667 square meters) of land costs as high as hundreds of thousands of yuan or even over 1 million yuan. Who dares to invest under such high costs? All of the water, electricity and natural gas are monopolized by state-owned enterprises. Using them and building factories would cost a lot. Still, you need to pay for various official approvals. Still, you need to pay the third-party evaluations on environmental protection, energy efficiency and clean production. Who dares to invest when investment costs are so high and profit isn't guaranteed?

China's state-run media quickly responded in order to dampen the public's increasing anger over hefty burdens placed on companies by the government. Global Times, a tabloid controlled by the Communist Party, posted an article saying the labeling of tax rate being “deadly” was too exaggerated. @BlueWhale, an economic journalists’ platform, highlighted [6] the Global Times’ arguments:

1、与发达国家比,中国的宏观税负不算高,单就制造业和美国比,中国企业承担的税负的确高些。

2、这些年来,中国企业需要缴纳的税收不但没增加,反而在不断降低。

3、在某种程度上,减税的幅度比不上一些企业盈利下降的幅度,因而显得税负重了。

4、“高税负逼走制造企业”,是对中企对外投资的错误解读。国内产能过剩,往外走是自然的。

5、中央经济工作会议已明确定调,未来还会进一步降低税费。

6、体制与机制的不顺畅,才是造成企业成本居高不下的重要原因。

1. China’s macro tax burden is not too high compared with developed countries, but China’s manufacturing taxes are really higher than that in the US.
2. China’s corporation taxes have gradually dropped in recent years.
3. In a sense, the pace of tax cuts hasn't matched the pace of profits dropping, so some companies feel that taxes have become heavier.
4. “Heavy taxes force manufacturers to run away” is a distortion of Chinese companies’ overseas investments. Overcapacity at home naturally leads to going out of the country to expand.
5. The central economic conference has decided to further drop corporation taxes.
6. It’s the clash between the system and operating mechanism that has caused high costs for corporations.

For some liberal economists like Xu Chenggang, however, the problem with China's economy goes beyond tax rates. He called for a genuine reform to address China’s urgent economic problems in an interview with Caijing [7], a Chinese well-known economic media outlet. Weibo user Caijing summed up Xu's view in a nutshell:

【许成钢:以“真改革”释放经济活力】改革的设计不能绕过制度改革,否则所有措施都是权宜之计,没有办法真正解决问题。产能过剩的大部分是国企,不会破产,如果不触碰制度问题,在这种条件下采取改变管理方式等没太大用处,强迫这个厂子限产,强迫那个厂子转产等等,都不是改革。

The design of reform can't avoid system reform, otherwise all measures would become expedient, unable to solve real problems. It's largely the state-owned enterprises that have created overcapacity, but can't go bankrupt. Without treating systemic problems, just changing management measures would have little effect. Only forcing factories to limit capacity or change production shouldn't be called reform.

For Xu and others, a genuine reform of the system is the privatization of state-owned enterprises so as to rejuvenate a competitive market.