Zhang Zhenfeng, who owns a street-side photo-print shop in Beijing, says he has never been happier with business conditions than in the past couple of months.
'I used to pay a monthly tax of some 800 yuan (HK$983). And it was a fixed rate,' he said. 'I had to pay it whether I had business or not. Now I just have to pay around 100 yuan.'
It is the first tax cut he has seen since opening his shop eight years ago and a welcome boost for small businesses, who have been struggling recently, 20 years after they first flourished following their endorsement by Deng Xiaoping, the 'chief architect' of reform and opening up.
Another small-business owner in the capital, who runs a hair salon, said his monthly tax bill fell to less than 100 yuan from 750 yuan.
He said the central government's tax cut, designed to help the mainland's struggling small enterprises, was almost too good to be true. 'It is completely out of character for the government,' he said. 'Before, it seemed ready to grab everything you had.'
But Zhang said he had heard rumours that officials were planning to make up their lost revenue through other taxes. 'I don't think they will leave us alone like this for long,' he said.