China's Taxman Is Going For The Big Guns
GDP growth in China is at a five-year low, real estate is crumbling, and demand is falling across the board. But incomes are still growing, according to the Journal.
Tax bureaus want in on that, so they're starting to look beyond traditional salaried workers for revenue - chiefly at super-elite stock market and foreign direct investors, the report said. (Most Chinese workers are already taxed on a regular basis with payroll deductions, it said.)
This could have harmful affects on consumer spending. China is still a country where most money is spent by the wealthy.
On top of China's local business elite, the taxman is also eyeing wealthy Chinese abroad, the report said. Like in the U.S., Chinese policy is to tax all citizens, no matter where they live in the world. Except that they haven't been doing a very good job of it so far.
And within China, they're looking at foreign multinationals and their employees. They might even start restricting foreigners who evade their taxes from leaving to the country until they've coughed up, the Journal reported.
Not the warmest of welcomes to foreign investors. Some have already started to pack their bags and leave. Just look at Macau, the Las Vegas of China, where casino revenue is expected to fall by 25 percent this month.
Fun's over, guys.