China | Raising revenue

China mulls a bold test of taxation without representation

With revenue declining, its leaders must figure out how to collect more money

Illustration of several men holding a giant arrow resembling the dragon parade dance.
Illustration: Pete Ryan
|HONG KONG

CHAIRMAN MAO ZEDONG was a fan of meetings. “Whenever problems arise, call a meeting,” he wrote in 1949. “Place problems on the table.” Otherwise, he warned, they can drag on for years. A tableful of problems now beset China’s economy, including deflation, debt distress and demographic decline. A property slump has eroded confidence and hurt the land sales that help finance local governments. China also faces growing opposition from trading partners, who are limiting what they sell and buy from a country they now count as a geopolitical rival.

Explore more

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “In need of a lift”

Truth and lies: The new science of disinformation

From the May 4th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

Which Olympic sports is China good at?

The country’s athletes seem to prefer competing indoors and as individuals

To revive the economy, China wants consumers to buy better stuff

It is offering them money to do so


When China hides disasters in a memory hole

A revealing attempt to forget a terrible plane crash


China is itching to mine the ocean floor

It wants to dominate critical-mineral supply chains

China unveils its new economic vision

It promises many reforms, but remains ambivalent about the role of the market

The nationalism of ideas

Xi Jinping wants Chinese systems of knowledge, free of Western values