Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Govt plans to bring more firms under 25% tax rate

Companies with revenue of ₹100500 crore could be covered

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com

The finance ministry is considerin­g a plan to extend the benefit of a lower 25% corporate tax rate to relatively bigger companies in the next financial year, a person privy to early discussion­s in the government said.

The tax rate for companies with annual revenue of less than ₹50 crore a year was reduced to 25% from 30% in the Union budget for the current fiscal year.

With tax revenue growth surpassing expectatio­ns in 2016-17, the government is now planning to raise the revenue eligibilit­y for companies to anywhere between ₹100 crore and ₹500 crore subject to revenue implicatio­ns of the move at the time of finalising the budget for 2018-19, the person said on condition of anonymity.

Finance minister Arun Jaitley in 2015 first proposed to cut corporate tax from 30% to 25% over the next four years.

The government plans to cut the tax rate to make Indian companies globally competitiv­e and attract more investment­s to the country. Lowering the tax rate will become easier for the government as the tax base widens and compliance rate increases.

The central government’s total tax receipts rose 18% to ₹17.1 lakh crore in the year ended March 31, beating even the revised estimate made in February this year of ₹16.97 lakh crore the finance ministry said in April.

As part of the plan to lower rates, the government had in 2016 lowered the corporate tax rate by one percentage point to 29% for companies with revenue up to ₹5 crore and also announced a concession­al tax rate of 25% to new manufactur­ing companies that do not avail of any exemptions.

Subsequent­ly, in the 2017-18 budget, Jaitley extended the 25% tax rate to all firms with up to ₹50 crore sales. The idea now is to include mid-sized corporate tax payers.

Their effective tax rate is higher than large companies which avail of various tax breaks to keep their effective tax rate lower than the nominal rate of 30%.

“Next year, depending on revenue implicatio­ns, we could raise the bar to ₹100 crore to ₹500 crore,” said the person cited above.

Tax experts welcomed the move.

“Any incrementa­l step affirming the government’s intention to move in the direction of a promised globally competitiv­e 25% corporate tax regime is welcome,” said Rahul Garg, Partner, PwC.

In the case of personal income tax too, the government lowered the rate in 2017-18 budget from 10% to 5% in the lowest income slab of ₹2.5 lakh to ₹5 lakh.

Steps to widen the tax base has resulted in rising compliance levels, including in personal income tax, another person briefed about the trend said on condition of anonymity.

The number of income tax return filers has increased to close to 50 million as on March 31,2017, said the second person citing provisiona­l numbers. There were only 39 million tax return filers (including 700,000 companies) in financial year 2013-14, according to official data released in October 2016.

The number of “income tax payers” is higher at about 65 million as on March 31, 2017 as many salaried individual­s whose taxes are deducted at source by their employers, do not file income tax returns.

Although tax breaks is a major cause of disputes, weeding out large personal income tax incentives such as exemption given to savings, may not be easy for the government to drop.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Finance minister Arun Jaitley in 2015 first proposed to cut corporate tax from 30% to 25% over the next four years
MINT/FILE Finance minister Arun Jaitley in 2015 first proposed to cut corporate tax from 30% to 25% over the next four years

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