CIRCULAR ON QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE HANDLING OF TAXATION RELATEDTO ENTERPRISES WITH FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN MEDICAL AND EDUCATIONAL TRADES
CIRCULAR ON QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE HANDLING OF TAXATION RELATEDTO ENTERPRISES WITH FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN MEDICAL AND EDUCATIONAL TRADES
(State Administration of Taxation: 4 July 1994 Coded Guo Shui Fa[1994] No. 152)
Whole Doc.
To the tax bureaus of various provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities, the tax bureaus of various cities with independent
planning and various sub-bureaus of the Offshore Oil Tax Administration:
The question concerning the handling of taxation related to
enterprise with foreign investment in medical and educational trades is
hereby clarified as follows:
I. In accordance with the principle as stipulated in the Article 1 of
the Income Tax Law (hereinafter referred to as Tax Law) for enterprise
with foreign investment and Foreign Enterprises and Article 2 of the
Detailed Rules for Implementation of the Tax Law for enterprise with
foreign investment and Foreign Enterprises (hereinafter referred to as the
Detailed Rules for Implementation), enterprise income tax shall be
calculated and paid in accordance with the stipulations of the Tax Law and
its Detailed Rules for Implementation for the business income and other
income of the enterprise with foreign investment in the medical and
educational undertakings.
II. The fees collected from students by enterprise with foreign
investment in the educational trade as well as other incomes, except for
the items which are exempt from business tax in accordance with the
stipulations of Section (4), Clause 1, Article 6 of the Provisional
Regulations Concerning Business Tax, shall be regarded as business income
of the enterprises and business tax is calculated and paid; the balance of
the whole lot of income (including income that is exempt from business
tax) they gained, after deducting from cost, expenses and losses, shall be
regarded as payable amount of income on the basis of which enterprise
income tax is calculated and paid. For school operating with foreign
investment which first collects cash pledge and then returns the cash
pledge in full after the conclusion of the school term in accordance with
the school statute or the stipulations of the entrance contract and which
uses the interest on cash pledge as tuition, the cash pledge may not be
regarded as business income, only the interest gained on the cash pledge
is regarded as business income on which tax is calculated and paid; for
schools which first collect high-value fees in accordance with the school
statute or the stipulations of the entrance contract, the fees are
partially returned to the students after the conclusion of the school term
or when the students discontinue their schooling midway or leave the
school, and are partially retained for the enterprise itself, the part of
fees that should be returned may be regarded as cash pledge, not as
business income, but tax is calculated and paid for the interest derived
therefrom and that part of fees not to be returned which is regarded as
business income when received.
III. For the various items of incomes gained by enterprise with
foreign investment in the medical trade, with the exception of the
projects which are exempt from business tax as stipulated in Section (3),
Clause 1, Article 6 of the Provisional Regulations on Business Tax, shall
all be subjected to the calculation and payment of business tax; the
balance of the various items of income they gained, after deducting
related costs, expenses and losses, shall be regarded as the amount of
taxable income for which enterprise income tax is calculated and paid.
n cash pledge as tuition, the cash pledge may not be
regarded as business income, only the interest gained on the cash pledge
is regarded as business income on which tax is calculated and paid; for
schools which first collect high-value fees in accordance with the school
statute or the stipulations of the entrance contract, the fees are
partially returned to the students after the conclusion of the school term
or when the students discontinue their schooling midway or leave the
school, and are partially retained for the enterprise itself, the part of
fees that should be returned may be regarded as cash pledge, not as
business income, but tax is calculated and paid for the interest derived
therefrom and that part of fees not to be returned which is regarded as
business income when received.
III. For the various items of incomes gained by enterprise with
foreign investment in the medical trade, with the exception of the
projects which are exempt from business tax as stipulated in Section (3),
Clause 1, Article 6 of the Provisional Regulations on Business Tax, shall
all be subjected to the calculation and payment of business tax; the
balance of the various items of income they gained, after deducting
related costs, expenses and losses, shall be regarded as the amount of
taxable income for which enterprise income tax is calculated and paid.
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