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Why has a ‘vague’, brief mention of a new ‘common prosperity’ push got on the nerves of China’s rich?
- Xi Jinping outlined how China will keep ‘income distribution and the means of accumulating wealth well-regulated’ at the 20th party congress
- So-called common prosperity was first mentioned by Xi last year amid a drive to close the country’s yawning wealth gap
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He Huifengin Guangdong
“The more vague it is, the more afraid everyone is.” A renewed push to regulate wealth accumulation has triggered fresh worries among wealthy and upper middle-class families in China.
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First mentioned last year as part of a plan to address inequality, President Xi Jinping laid out more practical implications of so-called common prosperity in Sunday’s work report to the 20th party congress.
Xi outlined how a personal income tax system will be improved, while highlighting how China will keep “income distribution and the means of accumulating wealth well-regulated”.
“We will protect lawful income, adjust excessive income, and prohibit illicit income,” said Xi.
Officials have previously denied the strategy is a Robin Hood-style steal from the rich to give to the poor plan, but concerns over investment and asset security remain.
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