In August 2015, China’s fiscal spending jumped 33% from the year before. For the first eight months of 2015, government spending is up 14.8%. There are early signs that this is helping the economy with property sales and construction increasing from one year earlier.
40% Yes |
60% No |
36% Yes |
49% No |
3% Yes, and eliminate federal agencies that are unconstitutional |
5% No, cuts to public spending will negatively affect the economy |
1% Yes, but by drastically reducing the benefits and salaries of government officials |
2% No, increase taxes on large multinational corporations instead |
0% Yes, and increase taxes |
2% No, reduce military spending instead |
1% No, increase taxes on the wealthy instead |
|
0% No, reduce the number of government officials instead |
|
0% No, focus on ending tax evasion instead |
See how support for each position on “Government Spending” has changed over time for 1.1k China voters.
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See how importance of “Government Spending” has changed over time for 1.1k China voters.
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Unique answers from China users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
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