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Magic (black) with numbers | The Indian Express

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There was a time when Mr Narendra Modi — and on cue his Finance Minister — swore by the private sector. Like Agriculture and most of the Services, in industry too, Mr Modi’s preferred model was private sector-led growth. The State will step back and be content to be the regulator where regulation was necessary.

At some point of time, after demonetisation, Mr Modi appears to have changed his philosophy. As his faith in the private sector waned, he became a votary of the government-led model. With Budget 2022-23, the change is complete. This is a Budget driven by one engine: government capital expenditure. The rub, however, lies in the numbers.

Shifting Gears

The Finance Minister claimed that in 2021-22 the government had exceeded budgeted capital expenditure. As against a BE of Rs 5,54,236 crore, the RE number was Rs 6,02,711 crore. The surprise turned out to be unpleasant after one read the fine print. The latter amount included a sum of Rs 51,971 crore that was infused into Air India to repay past loans and liabilities before privatization! I did not know that repaying a loan would qualify as capital expenditure! Deducting this amount, the capital expenditure in 2021-22 was only Rs 5,50,840 crore — lower than the BE!

That is not surprising. The government’s capacity to spend money on the capital account is constrained by many factors: multiple levels of decision-making, huge paperwork, diffused accountability, and so on. These constraints will not go away because Mr Modi shifted gears.

There are more unpleasant surprises in the numbers. The Finance Minister generously announced that she will allow the states to borrow an additional sum of Rs 1,00,000 crore, interest free, if it was tied to capital expenditure. Soon it became clear that the states would borrow directly from the market and the Central government would bear only the interest. The nasty surprise was that the Finance Minister quietly tucked this sum into the 2022-23 BE of the Central government’s capital expenditure that printed at Rs 7,50,246 crore, and claimed that the Central government had enhanced its capital expenditure by 35 per cent over the previous year! By no stretch of argument would the additional borrowing by the state governments for their capital expenditure qualify to be Central government capital expenditure. This was deception of the worst kind. Deducting this amount, the Central government’s capital expenditure in 2022-23 BE would be only Rs 6,50,246 crore — a modest increase of Rs 1,00,000 crore over the true number of 2021-22 RE.

Losing Faith

The Modi government’s rhetoric of government capital expenditure-led growth is hyperbole. Further, the government does not have faith in the appetite of the private sector to invest more. The latter was exposed when the ambitious scheme to privatize public sector assets collapsed. Two years ago, the government decided to privatize BPCL, CCL and SCI. Last year, the government decided to privatize two public sector banks and one public sector insurance company. Also, last year, the Finance Minister announced a Grand Bargain Sale of monetizing public sector assets valued at Rs 6,00,000 crore. Not one of the proposals has seen the light of the day! The Railways invited bids to privatize 151 passenger trains on 109 routes — and got no bids! It was no surprise that against a disinvestment revenue target of
Rs 1,75,000 crore in 2021-22 BE, the government hopes to achieve Rs 78,000 crore — that is if the LIC IPO goes through before March 2022!

There are good reasons why the private sector is shying away from investment. The foremost reason is lack of demand. The capacity utilisation in many industries is around 50 per cent. Why would any one invest more when there is idle capacity? Besides, the business environment has become more difficult, not easier, and is filled with cronyism, suspicion and fear.

Ignoring Advice

Many economists have advised the following approach to pull the economy out of the current state of jobless and sluggish growth:

– Stimulate demand by putting more money in the hands of the poor and the middle class — transfer cash, cut indirect taxes:

– Revive the MSMEs that have shut down or have scaled down their business. Such revival will also bring back millions of jobs that were lost;

– Spend more on welfare. The excuse that “we don’t have enough money” will not wash because the top 10 per cent of the population has garnered 57 per cent of the national income and holds 77 per cent of the nation’s wealth. They must come forward and say, like the American billionaires, “tax us more”;

– Review the licence raj that has found its way back through multiple regulations and directions by the RBI, SEBI, the Income-Tax department, etc;

– Rein in the CBI, ED, SFIO and IT so far as businesses and banks are concerned.

I have no expectations that the government will listen to well-meaning advice. Leaving that aside, will the Finance Minister solve a puzzle that is troubling many economists. In 2022-23, will the nominal GDP grow by 11.1 per cent (as projected in the Budget papers) and the real GDP grow by 8 per cent (as predicted by the new CEO)? That would be heaven with inflation at only about 3 per cent!



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Opp tears into govt on lack of Budget focus on jobs; social, farm sectors

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The Opposition on Monday slammed the government over rising unemployment in the country and the Budget allocating little for the farm sector or ordinary Indians.

Initiating the discussion on Budget 2022-23, Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said the Budget had betrayed hopes and aspirations of the people.

“The expectation was that the government would acknowledge the unprecedented levels of unemployment, which has left countless citizens, especially the young, with little prospect for a brighter tomorrow,” Tharoor said. “Admit that one-fifth of India’s population has plunged a staggering 53% in the last five years in their income.”

He said while the wealth of the richest 100 Indians has soared to Rs 57 lakh crore, 4.7 crore Indians have slipped to extreme poverty.

“Acknowledge,” he said, addressing the government, “that the Indian middle class has been left defenseless in the face of rising inflation, shrinking incomes and the consequent acceleration of household debt. Recognise the widespread distress and the anguish in the agrarian economy. Concede that all these misfortunes were avoidable misadventures of your style of governance. A style of governance that prioritises one-man rule over conversation, a style that demands conformity rather than seeking consensus.”

DMK’s Dayanidhi Maran called the Budget “anti-federal and anti-people”.

“This government is completely ignoring people’s welfare,” he said. More than 50% of the Budget estimate is going to be borrowed. So, basically you are going to sell and beg. Of the entire Budget, interest payment alone is Rs 9.7 lakh crore and capital expenditure is over Rs 7 lakh crore. Only Rs 3.36 lakh crore is left for development expenditure.”

He also accused the government of being biased against states not governed by BJP.

“You have done nothing for farmers,” Maran said. “You have not even broached the subject of MSP. MNREGA budget has been slashed by Rs 25,000 crore, even though demand for jobs rose due to the pandemic,” he said.

Calling the Budget “disappointing”, TMC’s Sudeep Bandopadhyay said it “contributes nothing to the common people”.

Tharoor said the Budget proposed creation of an “inadequate” 60 lakh jobs in five years, which is “a far cry from 2 crore jobs the government had promised in the equally illusory ‘acche din (good days, a reference to BJP’s earlier ad slogan)’.”.

He said there are reductions in budgeting for social welfare schemes, and significant cuts in schemes for crop insurance, minimum support price (MSP) and fertliser, which has left many farmers’ groups to term this as a “revenge Budget”.

The Congress leader also said there is no meaning of GDP growth unless one is concerned about public welfare. He tore into the government over rise in fuel and gas prices, besides rising food prices. He said corporate surcharge had been reduced from 12% to 7% but no tax relief was given to the middle class.

“Unemployment is pegged at 6.75 % as of January. This is welcome improvement from 7.9% in the previous month. It is still higher than the worst unemployment rate in the country in the past 45 years,” Tharoor said. “India’s unemployment rate has grown faster than Bangladesh and Vietnam.

“In the last two years 84% of households have suffered a loss of income, even as per capita income has fallen. The UPA pulled 27 crore Indians out of poverty, this government has pushed back 47 crore people into poverty.”

He also criticized the government over reduction in MGNREGA allocations. “The reduced MGNREGA allocation in the Budget blatantly ignores on-ground reality. Experts have consistently pointed out that MGNREGA needs Rs 1.34 lakh crore, but this government has allocated only Rs 73,000 crore. At the current allocation government will be able to provide just 16-20 days of work,” he said.

Tharoor said rising inequality threatens the social fabric of this country.

“We have already seen this during the railway recruitment exams, where 1.25 crore applied for 35,000 listed jobs,” the Thiruvananthapuram MP said. “This grave unemployment threatens to convert our demographic dividend into a demographic disaster. It required a sense of urgency and purpose from the government, which is missing in all this talk of ‘Amrit Kal’.”

Calling the Budget “long on promises but short on effect”, Trinamool’s Sudip Bandopadhyay said, “(There is) no sign of any overall reform. This is a sell-India budget: Air India, NILL, LIC — all sold. This government is in the mood to sell all PSUs. We totally oppose this idea.”

He said, “Unemployment has skyrocketed. Big industries cannot generate the kind of employment that MSMEs can. Government should focus on them.”

Raising the issue of state funding of elections, Bandopadhyay said, “What is the thinking of the government regarding state funding of elections? The Indrajit Gupta committee broadly placed that all recognised political parties will be extended support for their candidates to contest elections. It was an all-party resolution also. State funding of elections is a necessity at this time.



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Daily Briefing: 6 mega projects ignore green commitments they made; Diplomatic boycott of Winter Olympics by India

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Express Investigation

One of them is in the strategic border state of Arunachal, the proposed largest hydel plant in India; the other is on the state’s border with Assam, currently the largest hydel project under construction. Then there’s the proposed new international airport in Goa; a mine in Odisha run by the world’s largest coal producer; the country’s first private mega thermal plant in Chhattisgarh — and, finally, the flagship river-linking project in Madhya Pradesh. These are six mega projects where stringent conditions to compensate for the project’s high environmental impact have been sidestepped, an investigation by The Indian Express has revealed. 

Only in the Express

The Centre will come out with an expression of interest for the sale of IDBI Bank by the end of March but may not offload its entire stake in the bank in one go, Department of Investment and Public Asset Management Secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey said. The government will also file the Draft Red Herring Prospectus, or the primary prospectus, of Life Insurance Corporation with the market regulator next week, and expects to list it on stock exchanges by the end of the financial year. 

From the Front Page

Calling Beijing’s move to pick a Chinese soldier involved in the Galwan incident as an Olympic torchbearer “regrettable”, India said that its envoy will not attend the opening or closing ceremonies of the Winter Olympics beginning Friday in Beijing. This, in effect, means that New Delhi will boycott the Olympics at the diplomatic level although it will send an athlete for the event.

With a week left for the first phase of elections in Uttar Pradesh, the first cracks appeared in the Opposition front with one of the partners of the Samajwadi Party-led alliance “returning” the seats that were part of its share. The Apna Dal (Kamerawadi) was to contest 18 seats as part of its alliance with the SP. But trouble began when the SP announced its leader Amarnath Maurya as the candidate from Allahabad West, one of the seats on the Apna Dal (K)’s list and the latter decided to “return” the seats offered to it.

The government has written to the Rajya Sabha Secretariat to disallow an MP’s provisionally accepted question in the Upper House on the ‘Position of India in Democracy Index’, seeking the reason why India slid to the 53rd position in the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index, The Indian Express has learnt. The question, scheduled for a response on February 10, had been asked by TMC MP Shanta Chhetri. 

Must Read 

He is among the last of Chambal’s dreaded dacoits, facing over a hundred cases including murder. Now, Jagan Gurjar is the target of a police manhunt across three states after he openly issued threats on video to Girraj Singh Malinga, Congress MLA in Rajasthan’s Dholpur district, daring the legislator to face him without his security. Malinga hit back, telling Gurjar to specify a time and turn up at his home if he is a “mard ka bacchha”.

Does the Punjab Congress finally have a CM face? Well, all indications point towards Charanjit Singh Channi. An internal survey conducted by the party found that he was most popular among the aspirants for the top post. Congress sources said over 50 lakh people were contacted and asked about their preference between three choices: Channi, Punjab Congress chief Navjot Singh Sidhu, or not to name anyone. Rahul Gandhi is set to make an official announcement on February 6 at a virtual rally. 

This year’s Budget indicates that growth will have to be public sector driven, according to Jehangir Aziz, Chief Emerging Markets Economist at J P Morgan. He writes: “The budget has complicated macroeconomic management and the continued emphasis on public-sector driven growth raises concerns about the sustainability of such a strategy with debt already at such a high level.”

Rahul Gandhi’s fiery speech in Parliament, where he accused the Modi government of “weakening” the country and bringing Pakistan and China together, sparked a war of words between the Congress leader and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, who tweeted that “some history lessons are in order”. Pakistan and Chinese leaders describe their ties using metaphors such as “higher than the mountains” and “deeper than the oceans”. So, what’s the history of the relationship? We explain. 

And Finally

Right before the U-19 World Cup, the Indian team’s coach received a distress call from Vice-Captain Shaik Rasheed — he broke down and told him he had tested positive for Covid-19. As luck would have it, he recovered right before the quarterfinals against Bangladesh. He was rusty in his 26-run knock, but it didn’t matter. He was back on the field. And when it mattered, in the semifinals against Australia, he showed why he is being rated so highly. Resilience is Rasheed’s middle name and a look at his journey to the U-19 team shows you why. 

Delhi Confidential: Nitin Gadkari appears to be keen on championing green initiatives. The Union minister, who has taken initiatives in production of bio-fuel and organic farming, makes it a point to show to visitors a room heater that runs on ethanol at his residence in the national capital.

Until tomorrow,

Rahel Philipose and Rounak Bagchi

Express Cartoon by E P Unny



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Cryptocurrency Tax News | RBI is Launching its DIGITAL CURRENCY |Budget 2022 Live Update



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LIC IPO key: Divestment numbers missed, Budget dials down target

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The government’s ambitious disinvestment agenda, flagged in the Budget announcement last year, has been scaled down.

While Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had set a target of Rs 1.75 lakh crore through disinvestment in the Budget estimates in 2021-22, the target has now been revised to Rs 78,000 crore. And for the year 2022-23, she has set a softer target of Rs 65,000 crore.

Incidentally, Sitharaman did not use the word ‘privatisation’ in her speech this year, the hallmark of her Budget presentation last year — the Opposition has been targeting the government for selling what it says are established companies and businesses to the private sector.

Although a revised target of Rs 78,000 crore has been set for this financial year, a lot will depend on the proposed public issue of the Life Insurance Corporation, expected to hit the market by March.

In financial year 2020-21, the government had raised Rs 37,896 crore from disinvestment. In the current financial year, it has raised Rs 12,030 crore so far, according to official data.

The highest that the government has raised through disinvestment till date has been Rs 100,045 crore in 2017-18.

Privatisation and asset monetisation were the hallmark of last year’s Budget. While the government has been able to sell Air India and Neelachal Ispat Nigam Limited to the Tata Group and bring out a National Monetisation Pipeline, privatisation of state-owned banks is yet to gain momentum.

“Towards implementation of the new Public Sector Enterprise policy, the strategic transfer of ownership of Air India has been completed. The strategic partner for NINL (Neelachal Ispat Nigam Limited) has been selected. The public issue of the LIC is expected shortly. Others too are in the process for 2022-23,” Sitharaman said in her Budget speech Tuesday.

In the previous Budget, she had announced that the government would go for privatisation of two public sector banks. But till date, the “Draft Cabinet Note for amendments to relevant Acts are under inter-ministerial consultation,” Budget documents said.

The government said that improvement in the pace of economic recovery would provide new avenues for enhancing disinvestment receipts in the financial year.

The privatisation of two state-owned banks and downstream oil major BPCL is now expected to stretch into next year even as the Centre is racing against time to bring the LIC IPO before the end of this quarter.

While the enabling framework for privatisation of one of the four general insurance companies —a key Budget announcement — has been done with amendments to the General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Act being cleared during the monsoon session of Parliament last year, the insurer targeted for the stake sale is yet to be finalised.

Markets participants expect the pending IDBI Bank stake sale also to spill over to next year.

The Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021, “regarding privatisation of two Public Sector Banks” was listed for introduction in the winter session of Parliament last year. But it was not taken up by the Cabinet, despite a draft being ready, a government official said. Opposition to privatisation by bank unions, pullback on the farm laws and the upcoming Assembly elections seem to have had a bearing on the timing of the privatisation of banks.

“…we propose to take up the privatization of two Public Sector Banks and one General Insurance company in the year 2021-22. This would require legislative amendments and I propose to introduce the amendments in this Session itself,” Sitharaman had said in her Budget speech last year.

Other companies in line for privatisation include Shipping Corporation of India, BEML, Container Corporation of India and Pawan Hans. The government has received financial bids for Pawan Hans and Neelachal Ispat Nigam Limited, and the privatisation process has moved to the concluding stage.

The government had also put out a four-year National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) worth an estimated Rs 6 lakh crore. Roads, railways and power sector assets will comprise over 66% of the total estimated value of the assets to be monetised, with the rest in sectors including telecom, mining, aviation, ports, natural gas and petroleum product pipelines, warehouses and stadiums.



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India Plans Record Borrowing To Spend Big To Spur Growth

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India Plans Record Borrowing To Spend Big To Spur Growth

Bonds tumbled and stocks rose.

India doubled down on its spending commitment, relying on an already swamped debt market to borrow and spend big to spur growth. Bonds tumbled and stocks rose.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration will target a budget deficit of 6.4% of gross domestic product for the year starting April 1 — wider than the median 6.1% seen in a Bloomberg survey — as it prioritizes growth over fiscal consolidation.

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That plan will require borrowing a record 14.95 trillion rupees ($200 billion) to bridge the shortfall, much higher than the 13 trillion rupee consensus, as revenues from divestments are slow to materialize.

“While the fiscal expansion is expected to be pro-growth, the heavy supply is expected to worry the bond markets,” said Upasna Bhardwaj, an economist with Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd.

Indian bonds fell, with the yield on benchmark 10-year notes rising by as much as 21 basis points. Stocks traded 1.5% higher, paring earlier gains of as much as 1.8%.

The looser spending puts India on track to post one of the deepest budget deficits among major economies as nations spend their way out of the pandemic-induced downturn.

What Bloomberg Economics Says…

“This pro-growth budget poses upside risk to our near-term GDP growth projections. But it also risks crowding out private investment by spurring bond yields higher.”

— Abhishek Gupta, Economist

Boosting government expenditure on infrastructure, creating jobs and increasing productivity are key to the country’s sustained recovery, with growth this year seen at 9.2%, the quickest rate among major economies. The country expects growth momentum to continue next year with an estimated 8%-8.5% GDP expansion.

“This budget continues to provide impetus for growth,” Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in Parliament in New Delhi as she presented the annual plan. After using her maiden budget in 2019 to outline the government’s vision for the next five years, she used Tuesday’s plan to unveil a so-called ‘Amrit Kaal’ — a Hindi term that loosely translates to golden era — that provides the blueprint to steer the economy for the next 25 years.

Sitharaman, who has increasingly turned to income from state-asset sales to fund budgets, said the spending proposals will directly benefit the country’s youth, women and farmers, as well as public and private investment.

The long-awaited listing of Life Insurance Corp. of India, which could replenish the state’s coffers by as much as $10 billion if the government sells a 5% stake, is expected “soon,” she said.

She highlighted spending on infrastructure, including roads, railways, airports, ports, public transport, waterways and logistics, as well as the green energy transition, digitalization, public health and social infrastructure.

Tuesday’s proposals also included taxing any gains on crypto income at 30%, one of the highest rates among major economies. That could discourage trading in such volatile assets, whose ban the the central bank has repeatedly sought. The government also announced a central bank digital currency, shortly after China began CBDC trials in several cities and the U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of England are looking into its possibilities.

The budget was also notable for what it didn’t include. Bond investors were disappointed by the lack of progress on inclusion of Indian debt in global indexes. Citigroup Inc. had on Monday recommended buying Indian sovereign bonds ahead of the federal budget, saying the budget session was likely to see law changes enabling inclusion of India’s bonds into EM bond indexes.

Other key points from the budget are:

The current fiscal year’s budget deficit was revised to 6.9% of GDP, against a targeted 6.8%

Plans to issue sovereign green bonds for infrastructure spending

Spectrum auction next fiscal to ensure launch of 5G network

Slashed the current year’s asset-sale target to 780 billion rupees from 1.75 trillion rupees, and estimates 650 billion rupees next year

Fertilizer subsidy seen at 1.05 trillion rupees next fiscal, oil subsidy at 58 billion rupees, food subsidy 2.07 trillion rupees

Dividend from RBI, financial institutions expected to be 739 billion rupees

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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India Plans Record Borrowing to Spend Big To Spur Growth

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India Plans Record Borrowing to Spend Big To Spur Growth

Government is betting big on borrowings to spur growth

India doubled down on its spending commitment, relying on an already swamped debt market to borrow and spend big to spur growth. Bonds tumbled and stocks rose.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration will target a budget deficit of 6.4 per cent of gross domestic product for the year starting April 1 – wider than the median 6.1 per cent seen in a Bloomberg survey – as it prioritizes growth over fiscal consolidation. 

That plan will require borrowing a record 14.95 trillion rupees ($200 billion) to bridge the shortfall, much higher than the 13 trillion rupee consensus, as revenues from divestments are slow to materialize.

“While the fiscal expansion is expected to be pro-growth, the heavy supply is expected to worry the bond markets,” said Upasna Bhardwaj, an economist with Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd. 

Indian bonds fell, with the yield on benchmark 10-year notes rising by as much as 21 basis points. Stocks traded 1.5 per cent higher, paring earlier gains of as much as 1.8 per cent.

The looser spending puts India on track to post one of the deepest budget deficits among major economies as nations spend their way out of the pandemic-induced downturn. 

What Bloomberg Economics Says…

“This pro-growth budget poses upside risk to our near-term GDP growth projections. But it also risks crowding out private investment by spurring bond yields higher.”

— Abhishek Gupta, Economist

For the full report, click here

Boosting government expenditure on infrastructure, creating jobs and increasing productivity are key to the country’s sustained recovery, with growth this year seen at 9.2 per cent, the quickest rate among major economies. The country expects growth momentum to continue next year with an estimated 8 per cent-8.5 per cent GDP expansion.

“This budget continues to provide impetus for growth,” Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in Parliament in New Delhi as she presented the annual plan. After using her maiden budget in 2019 to outline the government’s vision for the next five years, she used Tuesday’s plan to unveil a so-called ‘Amrit Kaal‘ — a Hindi term that loosely translates to golden era — that provides the blueprint to steer the economy for the next 25 years. 

Ms Sitharaman, who has increasingly turned to income from state-asset sales to fund budgets, said the spending proposals will directly benefit the country’s youth, women and farmers, as well as public and private investment.

The long-awaited listing of Life Insurance Corp. of India, which could replenish the state’s coffers by as much as $10 billion if the government sells a 5 per cent stake, is expected “soon,” she said. 

She highlighted spending on infrastructure, including roads, railways, airports, ports, public transport, waterways and logistics, as well as the green energy transition, digitalization, public health and social infrastructure. 

Tuesday’s proposals also included taxing any gains on crypto income at 30%, one of the highest rates among major economies. That could discourage trading in such volatile assets, whose ban the the central bank has repeatedly sought. The government also announced a central bank digital currency, shortly after China began CBDC trials in several cities and the U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of England are looking into its possibilities.

The budget was also notable for what it didn’t include. Bond investors were disappointed by the lack of progress on inclusion of Indian debt in global indexes. Citigroup Inc. had on Monday recommended buying Indian sovereign bonds ahead of the federal budget, saying the budget session was likely to see law changes enabling inclusion of India’s bonds into EM bond indexes.

Other key points from the budget are:

  • The current fiscal year’s budget deficit was revised to 6.9 per cent of GDP, against a targeted 6.8 per cent
  • Plans to issue sovereign green bonds for infrastructure spending
  • Spectrum auction next fiscal to ensure launch of 5G network
  • Slashed the current year’s asset-sale target to 780 billion rupees from 1.75 trillion rupees, and estimates 650 billion rupees next year
  • Fertilizer subsidy seen at 1.05 trillion rupees next fiscal, oil subsidy at 58 billion rupees, food subsidy 2.07 trillion rupees
  • Dividend from RBI, financial institutions expected to be 739 billion rupees

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Union Budget 2022: Five things FM Sitharaman can do to make life easier for income tax payers in India | India Business News

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Ease in filing of income tax returns as well as strengthening the online grievance redressal mechanism for taxpayers are two key demands made by the common man with regard to tax administrative changes. India’s tax laws are rather complex and for simple tax calculations too one has to do two computations to figure out which method of taxation works better.
Tax return forms require various details for all kinds of investments, capital gains, bank interest calculations, dividend earned etc. For example, for capital gains and dividends, you have to give quarter-wise details to compute interest liability as well as transaction wise details of shares sold on stock markets for computation of capital gains. For bank interest, you have to calculate your yearly interest based on the quarterly interest received from the bank. Moreover, the returns forms change each year, making the task of filing returns rather tedious and confusing.
While various taxpayer friendly initiatives have been launched by the government to bolster the transparency of financial transactions in the country such as E-Sahyog ( a paperless mechanism whereby the income tax (IT) department notifies assesses electronically), e-verification of ITR to shorten the processing time and issuance of refunds, Income Disclosure Scheme (IDS), increase in PAN cards issued, and TDS SMS alerts, , a lot needs to be done to ensure the entire system remains seamless in administration, information is readily available, and facilities are accessible to all, according to Dezan Shira & Associates.
Here are a few ways Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman can make life easier for income tax payers in India:
1. Keep just one tax regime as opposed to an old and new one: A new tax regime was introduced in the 2020-2021 budget to offer taxpayers a simplified tax regime with more graded slabs that offered benefits to those not opting for exemptions and deductions but data from tax service provider Clear shows only 10% of taxpayers who utilized its portal for tax filing opted for the new regime. Unlike the new system, the old tax regime offers various exemptions and benefits, and it appears that a considerable percentage of individual taxpayers continue to prefer that.
“Individuals find the old regime is better because the various tax deductions and exemptions can effectively reduce the tax on a CTC of Rs 10 lakh, which is unlikely in case under the new regime. Individuals with an income bracket of up to 5 lacs and between Rs 5-10 lakh with lower deductions claims will benefit from the new regime. But on the other hand, individuals under a higher income tax bracket above Rs 10 lakh of income per annum will end up paying more tax under the new tax regime, else could have been benefitted more from the existing regime by making tax-saving investments,” says CA Ruchika Bhagat, MD, Neeraj Bhagat & Co.
“From a tax payer’s perspective, two income tax regimes are confusing and the existing income tax slabs must be revised. In taxation, there should be no confusion or uncertainty. There is a compelling justification for further individual income tax rate rationalisation,” said Bhagat. Hence, the government should consider unifying and retaining only one simplified regime going forward.
For individual taxpayers it is becoming tough to understand the pros and cons of each regime. In fact most of the individuals are struggling to find out which one would be more beneficial in one’s specific case. “Various exemptions and deductions are available under the provisions and the composition of these tax benefits widely differ from person to person. Hence, a comparative statement cannot be standardised as to depict which regime is more beneficial and this is demotivating the individuals regarding compliance of filing ITR. The government should standardise the rates and simplify the law and process to encourage more and more individuals for the compliance. In case the government wants to keep motivating individuals for savings and investments, instead of allowing as deduction from total income, the earnings from such investments can be made exempted and a simplified one single regime can be implemented so that lower current tax rate and reduced burden of tax in future on invested money shall motivate the individuals for compliance,” recommends Vinita Krishnan, Partner, Khaitan & Co.
Also, since individual taxpayers have an option to opt in and out of the new scheme, it unnecessarily results in a compliance burden for companies, for they will have to maintain requisite data sets of employees choosing the new regime, those sticking with the old regime, and those switching between the two.
Clear’s Archit Gupta recommends only one tax regime with a lower tax burden and one way to achieve this is to increment standard deduction annually based on inflation. He also recommends removing redundant exemptions such as children’s education allowance or hostel expenditure allowance and instead allow deductions for those who work from home.
2. Make the first appellate / dispute resolution mechanism provided under the Act more effective: Assessment and appeal processes have seen major transformation in the recent years. While these initiatives have eliminated the need for personal interface between tax officers and assessees, there have been teething problems in implementation. Further finetuning of these processes by introduction of necessary legislative changes and clarification will help the taxpayers reap the benefit of these reforms fully, said S.Vasudevan, Executive Partner, Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan Attorneys.
“The dispute resolution appellate is not in reality independent, in the sense that they report to CBDT (under the Ministry of Finance), the same administrative body which appraises them for tax collection. If the officers posted under first appellate / dispute resolution mechanism are shifted under the Ministry of Law and Justice while being posted as appellate / dispute resolution officers, the result will be far more effective. We have proof of that in the functioning of the highly respected Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,” said Nishant Thakkar, Partner, Lumiere Law Partners.
Secondly, the current first appellate mechanism does not give any priority to individuals and in particular senior citizens and hence their appeals take very long to be heard and disposed of. “The priority being suggested is a well-recognised classification for e.g. the High Courts have a separate list for all senior citizen litigation, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal has a separate Bench for small matters (Single Member Matters) etc. If such a priority is made available at the first appellate stage, it would be of great help to individuals and in particular senior citizens,” added Thakkar.
3 Simply the online tax return forms: The FM should make a genuine effort to simplify online tax return forms and make confirmations and disclosures optional for individual taxpayers. “Ease of Tax Filing is getting worse and rates of people not filing returns is going higher. “Currently apart from filling income tax return (‘ITR’), taxpayer is also required to make various other compliances (e.g. to file form 10IE for opting new tax regime, form 67 for claiming a foreign tax credit, Form 10BA for claiming deduction u/s 80GG, etc.). The information which is to be furnished in these forms are otherwise required to be furnished in the ITR and creates multiple compliance requirements. Government should eliminate such multiple compliances and make the ITR form as a single document for all such compliances,” said Ashok Shah-Partner, NA Shah Associates.
4. Integration: Interest that gets accumulated in your savings bank account must be declared in your tax return under income from other sources. Interest from both fixed deposit and recurring deposits is taxable while interest from savings bank account and post office deposits are tax-deductible to a certain extent. But they are shown under income from other sources, explains Clear. But more often than not, taxpayers, because of lack of awareness, forget to put the fixed deposit interest/ Saving account interest in the ITR. “If, this can be integrated with the Annual Information System and if the data can be pulled automatically, it will reduce the compliance burden and will also make sure that there is a high degree of tax compliance,” said Gaurav Garg, Head of Research at CapitalVia Global Research.
Many taxpayers lament that the compliance burden has increased with two forms to be reviewed, Form 26AS and AIS. ” The finance minister can consider incorporating the details of LIC premium paid, Public Provident Fund, home loan interest and principal payment etc in Form no 26AS/AIS. With this, the small individuals and businessmen will have easy access to all the deductions/ exemptions in Form no 26AS/AIS,” said Shah.
Form 26AS and AIS should be merged and consolidated into one, recommends Clear’s Gupta.
Moreover, by introducing the new TDS and TCS provisions in relation to sale and purchase of goods, the government has unnecessarily created new compliance burdens for transactions which were already covered under other reporting mechanism such as in GST billing. Thus, the government should consider withdrawing these provisions, said Vinita Krishna.
5 Introduction of Inflation-indexed Basic Exemption Limit: Currently, we have a system where exemption limits are set every year — or not changed at all. Whether it is the basic tax-free income limit or the limits for Section 80 C deductions, inflation erodes it each year. “An index-linked system of tax exemptions and deductions will allow citizens to be spared higher taxes resulting only from inflation,” said Anand Chatrath, Managing Partner, B M Chatrath& Co LLP. He also recommends that the divergence between corporate and personal income tax rates be brought down through rationalisation of surcharge and reduction of taxes at the top end of the bracket. “Or else, individuals with high tax rates over 30 percent will shift incomes to corporates owned by them. A five-year plan to converge personal tax rates towards corporate ones (now in the 15-25 percent range) should be announced in the budget,” said Chatrath.



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Insurers Seek Higher 80C Investment Limit; Lower GST On Health Products

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Budget 2022: Insurers Seek Higher 80C Investment Limit; Lower GST On Health Products

Currently, all financial purchases under the Section (80C) are capped at Rs 1,50,000.

Mumbai:

Insurance companies are seeking a separate deduction limit of Rs 1 lakh for insurance premium payment under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act in the upcoming Union Budget to bring in more people under the ambit of insurance.

The insurers also want reduction in the goods and services tax (GST) rate of 18 per cent currently applied on health insurance products to 5 per cent to make such products more affordable to common people.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present the Union Budget for 2022-23 on February 1.

“The industry has long pending expectations from the policy makers for incentivizing people to get life insurance by giving a separate deduction limit of minimum Rs 1 lakh for insurance premium payment under Section 80C,” Tarun Rustagi Chief Financial Officer Canara HSBC OBC Life Insurance said.

Life insurance is a long-term solution, unlike other financial products which have a shorter investment horizon and are covered under the 80C provision.

Currently, all financial purchases are clubbed under the same I-T deduction section (80C) capped at Rs 1,50,000.

“We expect the budget to consider creating a separate section for tax deduction on premium paid towards life insurance. This would enable a more logical segregation of customer’s funds into long-term and short-term kitties,” Edelweiss Tokio Life Insurance Executive Director Subhrajit Mukhopadhyay said.

Ageas Federal Life Insurance Managing Director and CEO Vighnesh Shahane said the Section 80 C is currently cluttered with several investment options such as Public Provident Fund (PPF), Equity-Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS) and National Savings Certificate (NSC) amongst others.

“At least, a separate section for term policies would be helpful given the current scenario and the huge protection gap in the country,” Shahane said.

Future Generali India Life Insurance Senior VP and Head Products and Development Chinmay Bade said that life insurance is a proxy to social security in case of death of a person as well as survival and, therefore, the exemption limit of 1.5 lakh under Section 80C needs a revision.

As per IRDAI’s Annual Report-2020-21, insurance penetration in the country is at 4.2 per cent of the GDP vis-à-vis a global average of 7.4 per cent. As of March, 2021, the non-life insurance penetration stood at barely 1 per cent.

Liberty General Insurance CEO and Whole-Time Director Roopam Asthana said due to the uncertainty spurred by the Covid-19 pandemic, health insurance has become an everyday need in order to protect oneself from uncertainties and is more relevant than ever.

“Therefore, the government should consider a drastic reduction in the GST applicable on health insurance premiums which is currently charged at 18 per cent. This will encourage people to purchase health insurance and additional top-up plans to protect themselves from medical crises and emergencies,” Asthana noted.

Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Managing Director & CEO Tapan Singhel believes that the premium price over coverage plays a critical role in the purchasing decision for customers. With the 18 per cent GST applied to health insurance, the premium price goes up which becomes a deterrent in people opting for sufficient coverage, he noted.

According to Edelweiss General Insurance Executive Director & CEO Shanai Ghosh, protecting health is paramount and so health insurance should be viewed as an essential commodity.

“I would therefore request the Finance Minister to consider the reduction of GST for health insurance from the current 18 per cent to the lowest slab of 5 per cent. This move will also make health policies more affordable and push more and more people to buy a health cover,” Ghosh said.

Standalone health insurance player Niva Bupa Niva Bupa Health Insurance’s CEO and Managing Director (MD) Krishnan Ramachandran suggested that the government should consider doubling up the medical insurance limit under Section 80D to Rs 50,000 in light of higher medical expenses post COVID.

Echoing similar sentiments, Raheja QBE General Insurance MD and CEO Pankaj Arora said in order to encourage more people to purchase health insurance and to ensure that they purchase the appropriate quantity of coverage, section 80D income tax exemptions should be raised, ideally doubled.

As per Reliance General Insurance CEO Rakesh Jain, for the Union Budget 2022, the government should consider bringing healthcare facilities, such as diagnostic centers, specialty hospitals, wellness facilities, under the ‘infrastructure’ category.

“This will bring in funding from large institutions, including insurance companies that seek and have regulatory obligation of investments in ‘infrastructure assets’,” he said.

The insurance and healthcare sectors need to evolve together to boost access to quality and affordable healthcare to the masses, he said.

Willis Towers Watson’s Head (India) Rohit Jain said the insurance industry in India is recovering from a difficult year in which life and health insurance claims surged on account of the pandemic.

Understandably, the industry has been pressing for direct and indirect tax sops, primarily for cushioning from the pandemic impact, but also to improve penetration and increase the speed of insurance influence, he said.

“That said, it would be a tight rope walk for the government to maintain fiscal prudence by balancing these expectations with the general health of the exchequer, especially considering potential public health related expenditure in managing the pandemic itself,” Jain added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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