Minimum Investment and Capital Contribution Schedule
Minimum Capital
Requirements
Chinese foreign investment law sets minimum Registered
Capital requirements at 30,000 RMB (about US$ 4,000) for LLCs, which include
Joint Ventures and Wholly Foreign Owned Enterprises (in practice, higher amounts
are generally needed to secure approval), and minimum Registered Capital is RMB
5,000,000 (about US$600,000) for a Foreign Invested Company Limited by Shares.
Note that industry-specific regulations may raise these requirements for certain
types of businesses ?in the insurance and securities industries, for example,
minimum Registered Capital requirements are much higher.
Capital
Contribution Schedule
There is currently a conflict between the Ministry
of Commerce (MOFCOM) and the State Administration of Industry & Commerce
(SAIC) as to which law is applicable in this area.
SAIC抯
requirements:
20% of Registered Capital initially; remainder to be paid
within 2 years of the establishment date set forth on the FIE抯 Business
License
MOFCOM抯 requirements:
Either 15% of the total Registered
Capital, or an amount equal to the minimum capital requirement (whichever is
greater) must be contributed within 90 days of the date that the FIE抯 business
license is issued. The remainder must be contributed according to the following
schedule:
Total Registered CapitalFull Payment Deadline
Up to
US$500,000 1 year from issuance of business license
US$500,001 ?US$1
million1.5 years from issuance of business license
Over US$1 million to US$3
million2 years from issuance of business license
Over US$3 million to US$10
million3 years from issuance of business license
Over US$10 million Up to
examination and approval authority
Lump sum payments must be made within
6 months of the issuance of the FIE抯 business license.
Industry-specific
regulations may also modify the above requirements. Both minimum investment and
capital contribution schedules are murky areas of Chinese foreign investment
law, with regulations that seem to either contradict or supplement each other
(no one can agree which), giving the authorities the effective ability to modify
these requirements at will. The safest approach, then, would be to comply with
industry-specific regulations and then look to the Company Law where these
regulations are silent.
No comments:
Post a Comment