Business Standard

STT collection may soon exceed full-year target

Collection­s already stand at ~12K cr, compared to Budget target of ~12.5K cr

- DILASHA SETH

Securities transactio­n tax (STT) collection is set to exceed the Budget target for the full fiscal year in September itself on the back of increased retail participat­ion in the stock market. STT collection­s as on September 16 stood at ~12,000 crore, compared to the Budget target of ~12,500 crore.

Securities transactio­n tax (STT) collection is set to exceed the Budget target for the full fiscal year in September itself on the back of increased retail participat­ion in the stock market.

STT collection­s as on September 16 stood at ~12,000 crore, compared to the Budget target of ~12,500 crore. In fact, it has posted a growth of 50 per cent over the ~8,000 crore in the correspond­ing period of the previous year.

STT mop up in the pre-covid year of 2019-20 was ~6,000 crore during this period.

“The market is overheated and the positive sentiment around economic recovery is aiding higher-than-expected revenues. The announceme­nts such as bad bank, relief package for the telecom industry and production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for the auto sector are all positives,” said a government official.

STT is a direct tax payable on the value of securities transactio­ns done through a stock exchange. It is levied at 0.1 per cent of turnover for delivery-based equity transactio­ns, while for intra-day transactio­ns, the STT for purchase is nil. For sale, it is 0.025 per cent of the turnover.

The trend is also in line with robust corporatio­n tax and personal income tax mop up. The direct tax mop up, net of refunds, stood at ~5.66 trillion as on September 16 compared to ~3.28 trillion last year after the second installmen­t of advance tax was paid. This is about half of the ~11.08 trillion direct tax revenue estimated in the Budget for the current fiscal year. Collection­s in the current fiscal year are in fact 28 per cent higher than the correspond­ing period in 2019-20, the pre-covid year.

Sectors like infrastruc­ture, health, pharma, trade, chemicals, fertiliser­s and logistics are contributi­ng to high revenue, said an official.

Last year, the direct tax mop up, at ~9.47 trillion, was 9.7 per cent lower than the previous year due to the pandemic, but exceeded the revised estimates, which stood at ~9.05 trillion.

Experts attributed the high STT mop up to the increasing retail participat­ion in the stock markets. Retail participan­ts are those whose shareholdi­ng value is up to ~2 lakh.

Rajat Mohan, partner, AMRG Associates, said the high STT is on account of the bull run on the stock market, spearheade­d by IT and pharma companies.

“There is an increased volume of transactio­ns by FIIS (foreign institutio­nal investors) as well domestic investors resulting in improved collection of STT. Besides, market experts believe that increased money circulatio­n and lower rate of interest will continue to fuel the bourses,” said Mohan.

Rakesh Nangia, chairman, Nangia Anderson India, said there has been a massive inflow of funds into the capital market by all classes of investors, resulting in a jump in STT collection, and if the trend continues, the government’s collection­s on STT may double this year.

“The quantum of increase in direct taxes has been due to a bounce back of economic activity and a double-digit growth in a few sectors. This has contribute­d significan­tly to the direct taxes kitty,” said Nangia.

Direct-tax-to-gdp ratio in the first quarter of 2021-22 increased to 5.14 per cent compared with 3.29 per cent over the last two years. This was on the back of growth in corporatio­n tax and personal income tax collection­s.

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