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China’s fiscal revenue posted its fastest monthly growth in more than a year in March, giving Beijing more room to sustain spending despite a prolonged property slump.
China’s general public budget (GPB) revenue rose 6.9% year-on-year, supported by higher prices, solid imports and improved tax compliance, finance ministry data showed. The GPB is the largest of the four budgets in the country’s fiscal system.
First-quarter revenue grew 2.4%, outperforming the same period in the past three years.

A key driver was the producer price index returning to growth in March after more than three years of decline, lifting price-linked tax receipts. Import-related taxes also outpaced overall growth, reflecting strong trade.
Personal income tax surged 190%, mainly due to Lunar New Year timing shifts and annual settlement effects, alongside tighter enforcement. Tax revenue from stock trading and vehicle purchases also rose.
Corporate income tax fell 13.8%, as companies paid less in annual tax settlements than a year earlier, while property-related taxes continued to contract, underscoring real estate weakness.
The improvement in GPB revenue supported government spending, which rose 1.1% in March. In the first quarter, authorities executed 24.9% of the annual spending budget, the fastest first-quarter pace in five years.
However, weak land sales remained a drag, with related revenue in the government-managed funds budget down more than 20% in March.
Contact editor Lin Jinbing (jinbinglin@caixin.com)
caixinglobal.com is the English-language online news portal of Chinese financial and business news media group Caixin. Global Neighbours is authorized to reprint this article.