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Plus&Minus
"A weekly column: Plus&Minus will
be published in Hindustan Times, Jaipur Live. This will
speak to the ordinary reader on contemporary economic issues in a
simple format".
Budget was More or Less Fair
Hindustan Times, Jaipur Live, July 13, 2009
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By Pradeep S Mehta Nani
Palkhiwala, the famous jurist used to deliver a popular public lecture
in Bombay after every budget. Criticising one such budget he termed it
as a ‘bureaucrat’s revenge’ as all the new proposals only levied new
taxes and introduced complications in rules, rather than simplifying
them. The latest budget hopefully is not in the same category but
Pranab Mukherjee could have dealt with the onerous tax regime created
by P Chidamabaram.
Every budget proposal deals
primarily with increasing revenue, rationalising expenditure and
increasing public welfare. Within the limited space offered by this
column, let us take a swift look at the pluses (good news) and minuses
(bad news) of the budget.
Pluses:
-
Increase in income tax exemption limit by Rs
10,000: This will imply the easing of individual tax liability by a
minimum of Rs 1,030 a year. For senior citizens the minimum benefit
will be Rs 1,545 a year. These measures will increase incomes
available for consumption expenditure
-
Tax exemption for interest payments on all loans
for post secondary education as against prevailing exemption only
for undergraduate and post graduate courses in engineering, medicine
and management, and post graduate courses in applied or pure
sciences
-
Extension of tax exemption for investments by
individuals to cover those under the New Pension Scheme
-
Scrapping of fringe benefit tax (FBT) which will
ease the administrative burden on companies
-
Changes in the indirect tax structure to provide
relief to sectors badly affected by the recession such as textiles,
automobiles, processed foods, precious metals
-
Alignment of tax rates to facilitate the
introduction of Goods and Services Tax (GST) which will integrate
multiple indirect taxes currently levied on goods and services
-
Announcement of efforts to evolve a new Direct
Tax Code through a process of consultation with the public
-
An ‘Alternative Dispute
resolution’
mechanism to bring speedy resolution to tax disputes between the tax
payers and the Income Tax Department
-
Not everything calls for celebration. Many
household items such as manmade fabrics, toothbrushes, contact
lenses, LPG stove etc have seen a doubling of excise duty from 4 to
8 percent
Minuses:
-
The Finance Minister has ignored
the corporate sector demand for a reduction in corporate tax.
Renting a house will continue to receive favourable tax treatment
relative to owning it.
-
A change here could have made a
favourable impact on the real estate market. The budget does offer
something to every section of society. But fairness does not result
in happiness.
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