Two draft laws under discussion at this year's session of the National
People's Congress (NPC) have been revised according to deputies'
suggestions.
Though the deputies agreed that in general the draft
property law was well-written and took into consideration the concerns of all
parties, they suggested some specific changes, Yang Jingyu, chairman of the NPC
Law Committee, said while delivering a report to the NPC presidium
yesterday.
The nearly 3,000 lawmakers attending the NPC's annual session
have been deliberating the draft property law.
Members of China's top
advisory body also discussed the draft law and made suggestions for further
revisions.
Yang said all the suggestions had been closely studied, and
that more than 60 revisions had been made in accordance with the opinions of NPC
deputies.
One major change lies in the stipulation that "one can demand
repair, replacement and rehabilitation if one's property is damaged". The
original draft submitted on Thursday to the NPC full session did not include
"rehabilitation".
Yang said many deputies had noted that property could
be both movable and immovable, and damage to immovable property, such as
degraded farmland, could hardly be fixed or replaced. The revised version also
deletes the time limit in the stipulation that "anyone who recovers the lost
property of others should return or hand in the property within 20 days". Yang
said deputies felt 20 days might be too short a period under some
circumstances.
Before being submitted to the NPC session, the draft had
received a record seven readings at the NPC Standing Committee.
Changes
were also made to the corporate income tax law, Yang said.
One revision
would raise the proportion of corporate charitable giving versus annual profits
that can be exempted from taxes to 12 percent from 10 percent.
"The goal
is to encourage more companies to donate money to support public welfare," Yang
said.
Deputies also removed a stipulation that would allow tax breaks on
infrastructure investment, saying funding for such projects would be adjusted by
the State Council.
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