Jiangsu Social Security Non-tax Credit Early Warning Shows Significant Results

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This article is reprinted from China Taxation News

Recently, Hu Wangxin, the finance director of Changzhou Jake Enterprise Management Services Co., Ltd., paid off social security fees before the deadline after receiving a credit warning from the tax authorities, avoiding a downgrade in credit rating. Hu Wangxin’s experience is a vivid example of how Jiangsu Province’s tax authorities have incorporated the risk of non-compliance in social security and non-tax payments into the credit warning system, achieving integrated management of tax and payment credit.

Since the implementation of the “Tax Payment Credit Management Measures” in July 2025, Jiangsu tax authorities have adhered to the concept of “tax and fee importance, integration, and coordination,” breaking traditional credit management boundaries. They extended supervision from taxation to non-tax areas such as social security fees, residual disability insurance funds, and cultural project construction fees. By the end of February 2026, a total of 576,100 related warnings had been issued across the province, with a 94.86% rectification rate for declared payments, achieving a “double improvement” in payment credit and declaration quality.

To improve warning accuracy, Jiangsu tax authorities focused on the actual needs of payers, optimizing 13 special warning indicators covering high-frequency scenarios such as social security declaration and residual disability insurance payments. The provincial bureau unified risk screening lists to enable automatic warnings during the declaration period and precise prompts afterward, helping payers avoid credit risks in advance. They also implemented targeted measures, setting a “correction window,” allowing slightly non-compliant enterprises to make full rectifications within a specified period to restore their credit scores.

Relying on the credit warning mechanism, tax departments across Jiangsu have extended their service chains: Suzhou collaborated with multiple departments to promote new credit regulations; Nantong provided social security reminders for newly established enterprises; Yangzhou used data profiling to offer targeted “one household, one policy” guidance, enhancing payment compliance through precise services.

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