Business Standard

Govt to take more steps to boost demand, growth: CEA

- MANOJ KUMAR & SANJEEV MIGLANI

The government plans to take more steps to boost consumer demand, including injecting liquidity through banks and simplifyin­g personal taxes, Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n said on Friday.

Subramania­n said the government had slashed corporatio­n taxes to attract investment and was looking for ways to boost consumer demand to support that investment.

"In the short-run, we are taking steps to increase consumptio­n so that anticipati­ng that consumptio­n, investment also goes up," he told Reuters in an interview.

One of the measures on the table is aimed at easing personal taxation and making the whole tax administra­tion simpler. The government is also considerin­g the report of a task force to bring India's six-decades-old tax legislatio­n more into line with those of other countries.

Subramania­n said the government planned to make public the recommenda­tions of the task force. "The direct tax code task force has submitted its report," he said, adding that the steps that have already been taken to streamline the tax administra­tion are likely to help in improving the tax buoyancy.

Last month, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman cut corporate tax rates from over 30 per cent to 25 per cent, and to 15 per cent for new manufactur­ing companies, putting it on a par or even ahead of some of its Asian peers.

That landmark move has raised hopes that the government might consider similar cuts to personal taxes to put more money into the hands of consumers and especially the middle class who form the core of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling group. A source in the finance ministry said the task force's recommenda­tions — which include cuts in the income tax rate by up to 10 per cent — could be announced even before the presentati­on in February of the annual budget for fiscal 2020-21, which starts in April.

"Timing of the implementa­tion is a political call," said the source, adding that officials have already held discussion­s on the issue.

Growth in April-june slipped to 5 per cent, its slowest pace since 2013. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has cut its growth forecast to 6.1 per cent for this fiscal year from an initial 7 per cent, citing a slowdown in domestic and global demand. New Delhi has also been trying to boost domestic growth through an infrastruc­ture package and a new loan programme organised with the banking sector that has doled out loans worth over ~800 billion ($11.1 billion).

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n said the government had slashed corporatio­n taxes to attract investment
PHOTO: REUTERS Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n said the government had slashed corporatio­n taxes to attract investment

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