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Tax Assistance for "Sichuan" Enterprises: Invoice "Small Incision" Leveraging Agricultural Compliance "Big Article"
Cover News Reporter Yao Ruipeng
The land of abundance, with fertile fields stretching for thousands of miles. From citrus juice shipped across oceans from Peng’an in eastern Sichuan to yak meat sold in supermarkets from the western Sichuan plateau, modern agriculture in Sichuan is thriving. However, behind this vibrant industry scene, seemingly ordinary agricultural product invoices play a crucial role in connecting production and sales and preventing risks. They are not only transaction proof but also the foundation for enterprises to operate compliantly and grow steadily.
“Small Entry Point,” Big Risks: The Importance of Compliance in Agricultural Product Purchase Invoices
According to Sichuan Provincial Taxation Bureau, a food company in Xingwen County, Yibin, was once identified by tax authorities as issuing an “abnormal invoice” for a bamboo shoot purchase worth 3.3465 million yuan, facing operational difficulties. The reason was that the company issued the invoice to an intermediary rather than directly to the individual agricultural producer of the raw material.
Under tax regulations, agricultural product purchase invoices are legally issued by enterprises when buying their own products from individual farmers, serving as input tax deduction certificates. The key is “genuine self-production,” meaning the invoice must be issued to the actual producer. This company’s violation of this rule led to the reversal of input tax credits and significant management costs to verify farmers’ information. According to the “Invoice Management Measures,” non-compliant invoices cannot be used as financial reimbursement proof. If a company uses false deductions, it risks back taxes, fines, and in severe cases, criminal charges. This lesson underscores the critical importance of regulating invoice management from the source.
The company restructured its procurement system, shifting to a “company + cooperative + farmer” model. By leveraging policies that exempt VAT for sales made by cooperatives to their members, the cooperative issues invoices and settles accounts uniformly, ensuring the authenticity of “self-produced” agricultural products from a legal standpoint and building a compliance “firewall” from the source.
From Passive Response to Proactive Construction: The Legal Logic Behind Upgrading Internal Controls
Nanchong-based company demonstrated foresight. Facing nearly 10,000 tons of raw material procurement annually from dispersed sources, the company proactively established a comprehensive management system driven by data and multi-dimensional verification. They built databases for farmers and transactions, achieving precise matching and cross-verification of “people, goods, invoices, and payments.”
This approach aligns with the tax law principles of “truthfulness, legality, and relevance”—the “three flows” consistency (goods flow, capital flow, invoice flow). It requires genuine goods transactions, real payments, and consistency between transaction parties and invoice recipients. Using digital tools, the company internalized legal requirements into operational internal controls, ensuring that over 300 purchase invoices issued since 2023 have been error-free. This demonstrates that embedding tax compliance into business processes is not only necessary for risk avoidance but also a driver for management efficiency.
Additionally, due to strong seasonal price fluctuations of raw materials, the company once faced tax refund rejections because it failed to accurately distinguish between tax-exempt initial processing fresh meat and non-exempt deep-processed meat sauces. This case warns that tax compliance requires not only genuine transactions but also precise cost accounting. When enjoying tax benefits, companies must separately account for exempt and taxable items.
To address this, the company introduced intelligent systems to enable full traceability from procurement to sales and precise cost allocation. With guidance from tax authorities, they set up auxiliary ledgers and retained data on price fluctuations, ensuring cost sharing reflects actual operations and meets tax compliance. For six consecutive years, they have been rated as a Tax Credit A-level enterprise. This is not only an honor but also a “golden sign” that translates into actual benefits like financing, credit lines, and policy advantages.
These cases show that tax compliance has shifted from an external legal obligation to a core competitive advantage for sustainable agricultural development. It requires enterprises to understand the legal principles behind tax laws and actively integrate them into internal controls. When regulation becomes habitual and credit turns into capital, Sichuan’s vast rural areas will cultivate a more resilient and sustainable industry ecosystem, vividly contributing to rural revitalization.