China warns internet platforms not to shift tax burden onto gig workers
Celebrities and high-profile influencers also under scrutiny, with regulators pursuing hundreds of such cases in recent years

“Platforms should not disguise additional fees during tax withholding and remittance processes, nor should they use such processes to shift tax obligations and increase gig workers’ burdens,” officials from the State Taxation Administration said at a press conference on Monday.
The administration added that it would step up supervision to ensure platforms do not offload their own tax liabilities onto gig workers.
Since June, China has required e-commerce, short-video and social-media platforms to report income earned by their users, including merchants and influencers. More than 7,000 domestic and overseas companies have complied so far.
Authorities are also scrutinising the industry’s top earners. The State Taxation Administration said it has investigated 1,818 individuals with high income and assets – including celebrities and major influencers – recovering 1.52 billion yuan (US$215 million) in taxes this year.