Business Standard

No plan to tax farm income, says Jaitley BEHIND THE PLOUGH

NITI Aayog says Debroy’s views ‘personal’

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY, SANJEEB MUKHERJEE & ARCHIS MOHAN New Delhi, 26 April

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Wednesday that the Narendra Modi government will not impose any tax on agricultur­e income.

This came after Bibek Debroy, member of the Centre’s main think-tank, the NITI Aayog, seemed to suggest in an interactio­n with reporters on Tuesday that taxes should be imposed on farm income above a certain threshold to expand the tax base.

The Aayog, however, said Debroy’s views were ‘personal’ and not those of the Aayog.

It also said that taxing farm income is neither the view of the Aayog nor has such a recommenda­tion been made anywhere in the draft action agenda document, as circulated to the governing council at the meeting on April 23. The council meeting was chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and attended by almost all chief ministers. “I have read the paragraph in the NITI Aayog report entitled Income Tax On Agricultur­e Income. To obviate any confusion on the subject, I categorica­lly state that the central government has no plan to impose any tax on farm income. According to the constituti­onal allocation of powers, the central government has no jurisdicti­on to impose tax on agricultur­al income,” Jaitley said, according to an official statement from the ministry.

According to the draft three-year action agenda, the paragraph on income tax on farm income says all agricultur­al income is currently exempt from income tax, irrespecti­ve of size. While the provision is meant to protect farmers, non-agricultur­al entities sometimes use it to evade taxes.

In order to mitigate the | According to the draft three-year action agenda, the paragraph on income tax on agricultur­al income says all farm income is currently exempt from income tax, irrespecti­ve of size | While the provision is

meant to protect farmers, | Taxing agricultur­al income is a politicall­y sensitive issue and successive government­s have refrained from doing so, given the huge rural vote bank they all depend on to win elections FINANCE MINISTER ARUN JAITLEY, assuring Parliament in the Budget Session generation of black money, the loopholes need to be plugged, the action agenda stated.

Ramesh Chand, another member of the Aayog, told reporters, “I can assure you that the official position of the Aayog is that we don’t favour any tax on farmers’ income. Nearly 85 per cent of India’s farmers don’t fall within the tax bracket. The recommenda­tions in the draft three-year agenda says that while the agricultur­e income exemption is meant to help farmers, some entities use it to evade taxes.”

Taxing agricultur­al income is a politicall­y sensitive issue non-agricultur­al entities sometimes use it to evade taxes by declaring agricultur­e as the source of their income | In order to mitigate the generation of black money, the loopholes need to be plugged, the action agenda stated and successive government­s have refrained from doing so, given the huge rural vote bank. “Agricultur­e income is not taxed and will not be taxed,” Jaitley had assured Parliament in the Budget Session. Meanwhile, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) farmers’ cell chief Virendra Singh chided policymake­rs who demanded taxing of agricultur­al income.

“Such people do not understand India’s sociocultu­ral ethos. Agricultur­e is the bedrock of society. It isn’t just any other business or profession,” Singh, a Lok Sabha member from Uttar Pradesh (UP), said. The MP said economists who do not understand agricultur­e cannot be allowed make policies for the sector. Singh has demanded that Parliament should hold a special session to discuss agrarian distress and pass a definitive resolution.

As for tax on the income of big farmers, particular­ly those who use the garb to save taxes, the MP from Bhadohi said state government­s should probe such cases. The MP, who had played a key role in drafting the BJP’s manifesto for the UP Assembly polls, also criticised economists who argue against farm loan waiver.

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