数据点评|增量财政资金落地(申万宏观·赵伟团队)
赵伟宏观探索·2025-10-18 16:03

Core Viewpoint - The article discusses the fiscal revenue and expenditure situation in China for the first three quarters of 2025, highlighting a slowdown in broad fiscal spending and the need for monitoring the progress of new fiscal funds [1][8]. Group 1: Fiscal Revenue and Expenditure Overview - In the first three quarters of 2025, the national general public budget revenue reached 163,876 billion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 0.5%, while expenditure was 208,064 billion yuan, up 3.1% year-on-year [1][8]. - Broad fiscal revenue showed a year-on-year increase of 3.2% in September 2025, recovering by 2.9 percentage points compared to August, while broad fiscal expenditure decreased by 2.3% year-on-year, down 3.8 percentage points from August [2][9]. Group 2: Budget Completion and Trends - The budget completion rate for broad fiscal revenue in the first three quarters was 68.9%, slightly below the five-year average of 69.9%, and for broad fiscal expenditure, it was 67.1%, also below the five-year average of 68.5% [2][9]. - The decline in broad fiscal spending is attributed to the end of large-scale government debt financing support, with a total issuance of 10.3 trillion yuan in net financing and new bonds by September 28, 2025, achieving an issuance progress of 87% [2][14]. Group 3: Incremental Fiscal Funds and Future Outlook - To address the weakening fiscal expenditure pressure in the fourth quarter, two types of incremental funds have been established, including a new policy financial tool of 500 billion yuan, with over 100 billion yuan already allocated to sectors like digital economy and artificial intelligence [3][19]. - The upcoming meeting of the National People's Congress Standing Committee in late October may involve discussions on new government debt limits, which could impact the allocation of fiscal resources [3][23]. Group 4: Revenue Improvement and Spending Trends - Broad fiscal revenue showed marginal improvement, with general fiscal revenue increasing by 2.6% year-on-year in September 2025, while government fund revenue rose by 5.6% [4][28]. - Government fund expenditure continued to decline, contributing to a further drop in broad fiscal expenditure growth, which was 2.3% year-on-year in September, down from August [4][51].