Business Standard

Mop-up target of 12% ‘unrealisti­c’: India Inc officials

I CORPORATIO­N TAX

- DEV CHATTERJEE

Even as the central government announced in the Budget that it would fall short in meeting the corporatio­n tax collection target for the current year, it has set an ambitious 12 per cent growth target in tax collection­s from India Inc for the next fiscal year.

“The tax collection targets from Corporate India are unrealisti­c and are too ambitions, especially when the government has announced hefty tax cuts,” said a chief financial officer of a large company.

The increased tax target comes at a time when consumer spending and sales growth are slowing down and most companies are not investing in new capacities. The average capacity utilisatio­n of factories is hovering around 76 per cent, and electricit­y production is falling.

In the Revised Estimates for 2018-19, the government is expecting corporate tax collection­s to fall 8 per cent — this was mainly due to a sharp cut in corporate tax rates announced in October last year. The corporatio­n tax cuts were effective from April 1, 2019. Chief executive officers said the corporate tax targets look aggressive, and how the government will achieve the target is not specified.

“Unless there is sharp increase in tax compliance, it is quite likely the government will have to cut current spending, as was the case in 2019-20 (FY20),” said an analyst with a foreign brokerage.

Besides, with budgeted nominal gross domestic product growth of 10 per cent yearon-year (YOY) and gross tax revenue growth of 12 per cent YOY, the implied tax buoyancy stands at 1.2, which continues to appear ambitious versus the 0.5 tax buoyancy achieved in FY20, he said.

“How the nominal GDP will grow to 10 per cent is a mystery,” said another analyst. Overall, analysts estimate the government’s net tax revenue collection­s to fall short of budgeted numbers by roughly ~60,000 crore in both FY20 and FY21, according to a Bloomberg estimate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India