China Posts First Fiscal Revenue Decline Since Pandemic
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China recorded its first annual decline in fiscal revenue since the Covid-19 pandemic, as a sharp fall in nontax takings outweighed a modest recovery in tax revenue.
Data released by the Ministry of Finance showed general public budget (GPB) revenue fell 1.7% in 2025 from the previous year, marking the first contraction since 2020, when revenue slid during the initial pandemic shock. GPB is the largest of the four budgets in China’s fiscal system.
The decline came despite a gradual improvement in economic activity over the year.
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- China's general public budget revenue fell 1.7% in 2025, its first annual drop since 2020.
- The decline was mainly due to a double-digit fall in nontax revenue amid a high 2024 comparison base.
- Tax revenue rose slightly, driven by stronger income tax enforcement, but land sale revenue and import taxes continued to drop.
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