China fines social media influencer $22 million for tax evasion

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BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) - China fined a social media influencer 108 million yuan (S$22 million) for tax evasion, the latest punishment meted out to one of the country's top online personalities amid a nationwide crackdown.
Xu Guohao, who livestreams on Momo, was ordered to pay back taxes, late fees and fines for tax evasion from 2019 to 2020, according to a statement from State Taxation Administration. It plans to further strengthen tax supervision of people in the livestreaming industry, the statement said.
China has ramped up enforcement of tax laws in the livestreaming sector for the past year to support president Xi Jinping's common prosperity campaign.
Streaming platforms are required to collect income taxes and deliver reports including the personal information of social media personalities to local authorities every six months, according to guidelines issued in March.
One of the country's most popular livestreamers - Huang Wei, known as Viya online - was fined US$210 million (S$291 million) in December last year. She has since disappeared from public view.
Li Jiaqi, another top salesman in the once booming industry, also abruptly disappeared from the internet.
There was speculation that he offended censors by showing a cake shaped like a tank shortly before the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.
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