Business Standard

JAITLEY HINTS AT NO CUT IN EXCISE ON OIL

This is not the time to upset fiscal mathematic­s, says Union minister

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

Union Minister Arun Jaitley urged citizens to pay their share of taxes “honestly” to reduce dependence on oil as a revenue source,

and ruled out any cut in the excise duty on petrol and diesel, saying it could prove to be counter-productive. While the salaried class pay their due share of taxes, Jaitley said others had to improve their tax payment record, which is keeping India “far from being a tax-compliant society”.

Union minister Arun Jaitley gave the strongest hint yet from anyone in the government that it would not be cutting excise duties on motor fuel, despite rising crude oil prices.

The revenue department has made it clear to the prime minister’s office (PMO) that for every rupee/litre cut in excise duties, the Centre will forgo revenue of ~140 billion, Business Standard has learnt.

In a blog posting on Monday morning, Jaitley said state government­s and citizens should all strive to increase the country’s ratio of non-oil tax to gross domestic product (GDP). While the salaried class must pay its due share of taxes, “most other sections” also have to improve their tax payment record, said Jaitley. The lack of which was keeping India “far from being a tax compliant society”.

“My earnest appeal, therefore, to political leaders and opinion makers would be that evasion in the non-oil tax category must be stopped and, if people pay their taxes honestly, the high dependence on oil products for taxation eventually comes down. In the medium and long run, upsetting the fiscal maths can prove counter-productive,” the minister stated.

The blog was titled ‘ The economy and the markets reward structural reforms and fiscal prudence’.

Over the past four years, said Jaitley, the central government’s tax to GDP ratio had improved from 10 per cent to 11.5 per cent. Almost half of this rise, 0.72 per cent of GDP, came from non- oil taxes. Which, at 9.8 per cent in 2017-18, “is the highest since 2007- 08, a year in which our revenue position was boosted by a buoyant internatio­nal environmen­t”, he said.

“Reliefs to consumers can only be given by a fiscally responsibl­e and a financiall­y sound central government, and the states which are earning extra due to the abnormal increase in oil prices.”

In a dig at Congress leader and ex-finance minister P Chidambara­m saying last week that the tax on petrol prices should be cut by ~25 a litre, Jaitley said “this is a ‘trap’ suggestion”. Without naming Chidambara­m, the minister noted the “distinguis­hed predecesso­r” had “never endeavoure­d to do so himself”.

“It is intended to push India into unmanageab­le debt (Congress-led) — something UPA government the left as its legacy. We must remember that the economy and the markets reward structural reforms, fiscal prudence, and macro economic nomic stability." “We have told the PMO that it will be inadvisabl­e for the Centre to go for an excise duty cut, in what is already a tight year fiscally,” a senior official told BusinessSt­andard. Adding: “If the paying public needs relief price in to a environmen­t, be high given oil come from states it forgoing needs to a share of their value-added taxes on petrol and diesel.” The price of the Indian basket of crude oil has surged from $66 a barrel in April to around $74, as opposed to the Union Budget estimate of $65 a barrel. In mid-May, global crude prices hit $80 a barrel, the highest since November 2014.

The price of the Indian basket of crude oil has surged from $66 a barrel in April to around $74, as opposed to the Union Budget estimate of

$65 a barrel

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 ??  ?? Over the past four years, Jaitley said, the central government’s tax-GDP ratio improved from 10 per cent to 11.5 per cent
Over the past four years, Jaitley said, the central government’s tax-GDP ratio improved from 10 per cent to 11.5 per cent

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