Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Multiple taxes on capital to affect savings, investment­s’

- Jayshree P. Upadhyay and Alekh Archana jayshree.p@livemint.com

The taxation on capital in India is from several sources and I think that at the marginal rate it adds up

URJIT PATEL, RBI governor

MUMBAI: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Urjit Patel said India’s taxation structure, with multiple taxes on capital, will impact savings and investment decisions, adding heft to the market chorus protesting the longterm capital gains tax.

“The taxation on capital in India is from several sources and I think that at the marginal rate it adds up,” said Patel while answering a question on India’s investment rate during a postmoneta­ry policy press conference. “...you have the corporate tax rate, you have the dividend distributi­on tax rate. For dividend income above ₹10 lakh, you have the marginal tax rate, which is whatever bracket people come in, that would be at the highest level. You (also) have a securities transactio­n tax and you have a capital gains tax. There are five taxes on capital and that would obviously also have an impact on investment­s and savings decisions,” said Patel.

Economic Survey data showed the investment-to-gross domestic product ratio peaked at 35.6% in 2007 but fell subsequent­ly. It was 26.4% in 2017. Similarly, domestic savings peaked at 38.3% of GDP (gross domestic product) in 2007 before falling to 29% in 2016.

The Union budget on February 1 re-introduced long-term capital gains tax on equities and equitylink­ed instrument­s. LTCG tax on sale of equities will be applicable on gains exceeding ₹1 lakh. The tax rate is 10%. The tax roiled equity markets on budget day.

The Sensex closed at 35,906.66, down 0.16%, its worst budget-day performanc­e in the five years of this government. While Indian equities’ subsequent losses are more to do with a global stock rout, experts remain divided about the re-introduced tax.

“The government’s proposal could have the effect of encouragin­g long-term holding of shares. That could curb excessive speculatio­n and it won’t be a bad outcome,” said R Narayanasw­amy, professor of finance and control at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore.

“That said, it is true that because of the multiple taxes on dividend and capital gains, the effective tax rate on financial income goes up. After the real estate meltdown over the last three or four years, equities are the only inflation-indexed investment­s available to the middle classes,” he added.

While the finance ministry did not immediatel­y react to the RBI governor’s statement, finance secretary Hasmukh Adhia had earlier said at the CNBC-TV18 Mint Budget Verdict event that one asset class should not be left untaxed.

An email sent to Sebi on Wednesday was not answered till press time. LTCG is one of the topics for discussion when RBI and Sebi boards meet the finance ministry on February 10 for a postbudget consultati­on, a person aware of the matter said.

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