China
relies considerably on surface water, but water in the majority of the
country’s rivers is not fit for consumption—and the health impacts from
water pollution are costly. Yet the construction of sewage treatment
facilities varies dramatically throughout China. Some cities have
constructed many plants, while others have not.
According to research by RFF Fellow Anthony Liu and coauthor Junjie Zhang, fiscal incentives—specifically, China’s tax sharing system—have a key role to play in the provision of sewage treatment infrastructure. In a new RFF discussion paper, “Environmental Infrastructure in China and Fiscal Incentives,” they note:
Liu and Zhang’s method sheds new light on China’s system of city-level fiscal incentives, tying them to city-level outcomes. They find that cities react to higher value-added tax (VAT) sharing ratios by expanding sewage treatment capacity. During 2002 to 2008, a 10 percentage point increase in the VAT sharing ratio translated to 13.8 percent more growth in sewage treatment capacity.
by Antung Anthony Liu and Junjie Zhang
Resources For the Future (RFF) www.RFF.org
October 15, 2012; Paper Published September, 2012
According to research by RFF Fellow Anthony Liu and coauthor Junjie Zhang, fiscal incentives—specifically, China’s tax sharing system—have a key role to play in the provision of sewage treatment infrastructure. In a new RFF discussion paper, “Environmental Infrastructure in China and Fiscal Incentives,” they note:
“Under China's tax sharing system, some cities are allowed to keep high shares of their value-added tax (VAT), while others keep relatively small shares. Since the VAT is levied on industrial activity, we hypothesize that cities that received relatively high shares were incentivized to direct financial resources toward activities that directly boosted the industrial tax base. One attractive form of investment is the construction of additional infrastructure in the form of sewage treatment capacity. Government officials in China widely believe that providing infrastructure is an important strategy to attract new industrial businesses and expand their tax base.”
Liu and Zhang’s method sheds new light on China’s system of city-level fiscal incentives, tying them to city-level outcomes. They find that cities react to higher value-added tax (VAT) sharing ratios by expanding sewage treatment capacity. During 2002 to 2008, a 10 percentage point increase in the VAT sharing ratio translated to 13.8 percent more growth in sewage treatment capacity.
Resources For the Future (RFF) www.RFF.org
October 15, 2012; Paper Published September, 2012
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