Business Standard

Compliance will make good lost revenue: FM

Sitharaman rules out any immediate plan for expenditur­e reduction

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday said she hoped steep cuts in corporatio­n tax rates would increase compliance, prompting her to stick to the fiscal deficit target for now.

“A call will be taken at the RE (Revised Estimates) stage,” Sitharaman told mediaperso­ns, t wo days after she announced big-bang tax reductions for companies.

The cuts would cost the exchequer ~1.45 trillion a year.

She ruled out any expenditur­e cuts as of now, saying that her ministry was asking for a quick release of money by department­s and ministries.

Even as bond yields went up after the announceme­nt on Friday, the finance minister said she had not taken a decision on revising the borrowing limit for the second half of 2019-20.

States stand on the brink of a fiscal crisis as their financial situation worsens due to the combined impact of slowing revenue growth on the one hand, and the recently announced corporate tax cut on the other. Most of them might end up either cutting their spending or expanding their fiscal deficit, the impact of which will linger on for years to come, officials and experts have said.

Tax revenue of 16 major states has contracted by 7 per cent in the first four months of the financial year (April-july), data accessed by Business Standard shows. Although five of them have growth in tax revenue, the quantum is small.

While Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, and Karnataka are relatively in a more precarious position, almost all of them are worried about the ways in which this situation can be faced, evident in the glaring gap in expected and actual revenue growth for most states.

This is the very reason that N K Singh, chairman of the 15th Finance Commission (FC), urged states to increase buoyancy of their goods and services tax (GST) revenue. Buoyancy means the degree to which revenues rise faster than growth in the economy.

The recent sentimentb­oosting corporate tax cuts will cost the government ~1.45 trillion of gross tax revenue (GTR). Now, as states are a 42-percent-party to GTR according to the 14th FC formula, they will together bear nearly ~60,000 crore of this revenue loss.

“Corporate tax is part of divisible pool and 42 per cent of the corporate giveaway rightfully belongs to the states. This corporate appeasemen­t is at the expense of states’ fiscal space. The Centre will recoup its losses from one source or the other. But for states, it is a loss for good,” Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Isaac said.

In this move, the Centre cut the base rates of corporate taxes, keeping the cess and surcharges intact. This is in line with the successive hikes in cess and surcharge on income taxes the Centre has been doing over the past few years. This cream never goes to states as cess and surcharge are not shared with states.

But Centre, too, has its worries with a sunset year. States’ revenue shortfall due to abysmal growth in GST revenue this year — nearly 6 per cent over the previous year — will be compensate­d by the Centre to deliver a 14 per cent growth in GST revenues to states, till 2022.

This is the reason state finance ministers are clearly lobbying against any kind of rate cuts in GST, looking at the broader horizon.

“I don’t foresee any bigbang reduction in GST rates as we are already under revenue stress. Most of the states are dependent on compensati­on. So, until FC awards are declared, I don’t think that the Council is in a position to reduce rates,” Himanta Biswa Sarma, Assam finance minister, told Business Standard.

The gap between expected revenue growth and actual growth observed in the first four months of FY20 is the reason experts think expenditur­e cuts are imminent this time.

“Expenditur­e cuts are likely to be required to avoid substantia­l fiscal slippage,” said Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA.

“The actual capital outlay of the 17 states (analysed) was appreciabl­y lower than revised estimates, partly reflecting expenditur­e curtailmen­t necessitat­ed by the lowerthan-forecast revenue receipts. It is possible that the states resort to curtailing capex, to adhere to the fiscal deficit,” ICRA also said in a note published earlier this month.

There have been multiple developmen­ts in public finance over the last few years that have put the financial position of states in peril, vis-avis the Centre.

In the past two Union Budgets, including the one presented by Nirmala Sitharaman in July, the Union government hiked excise duty on petrol and diesel in the form of cess. The revenue to the tune of ~26,000 crore each year was entirely pocketed by the Union government, as cess revenue is not shared with states.

This year, the government was successful to convince the Reserve Bank of India to pass on enhanced dividend to the former.

The additional revenue over budgeted numbers will accrue only to the Union government, as non-tax revenue belongs uniquely to the Centre.

 ??  ?? No change in fiscal deficit target for now, says FM Nirmala Sitharaman
No change in fiscal deficit target for now, says FM Nirmala Sitharaman
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