This book elucidates the murky realities of China's taxation system
today, and advocates bold plans for change. Theorizing finance and
taxation in relation to a national political system, the authors explain
the current tangled-up realities of China's creaky, inherited and uneven
tax system- and put forward a plan for radical change. This book will be
of interest to finance professionals, economists, and scholars of the
Chinese economy. The focus is to properly handle the three basic
economic and social relations between the government and the market (and
the enterprises as the main market entities), between the central and
local governments, and between the public power system and the citizens.
This book follows the research context of problem orientation - goal
orientation - practical operation, and puts forward the ideas, basic
goals and paths of fiscal system reform that adapt to the modernization
of national governance.