Deccan Chronicle

MEGA TALKATHON BUDGET

Fiscal deficit pegged at 3.5%; Nominal GDP to be 10%; Capex scaled to 21% Few takers for differenti­al tax slabs proposed for those foregoing exemptions

- MADHUSUDAN SAHOO | FC NEW DELHI, FEB. 1

In a move to boost consumptio­n for bringing the economy out of the worst slowdown phase, the government on Saturday announced some sops to cheer both corporate and aam admi in some way or the other, while at the same time, it widened budget deficit targets for the current and next fiscal years to help spur growth.

The most remarkable measures announced by the government in its Budget 2020 include, cutting personal income tax on lower slabs, raising deposit insurance to `5 lakh from `1 lakh at present, scrapping Dividend Distributi­on Tax (DDT) to encourage coporates for more investment, spending more on agricultur­e and rural sector, raising funds via listing of Life Insurance Corporatio­n (LIC), pegging FY21 fiscal deficit at 3.5 per cent of GDP, etc.

Presenting her second Budget in Parliament, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said that the

2020-21 Budget was aimed at boosting incomes and enhancing purchasing power, stressing that the economy’s fundamenta­ls were strong and inflation was well contained in the country.

As far as fiscal deficit is concerned, it is, however, expected that the government will miss its deficit goals for a third year, pushing the shortfall to

3.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) from a planned 3.3 per cent in the year ending March this year.

“The deficit target for the coming fiscal year starting April 1 was widened to 3.5 per cent,” the finance minister said. For the next fiscal, she also pegged net borrowings of `5.45 lakh crore and doubled target of raising revenue from the sale of government stake in PSUs to `2.1 lakh crore.

Sensing a good economic health in next fiscal, the government also pegged the country’s nominal GDP growth rate at 10 per cent in the next fiscal and the capital expenditur­e is scaled up by 21 per cent to prop up the economy.

However, Sitharaman said, “Receipts for 2020-21 are pegged at `22.46 lakh crore while expenditur­e at `30.42 lakh crore. The revised estimated expenditur­e for FY20 has been pegged at `26.99 lakh crore and receipts at

`19.32 lakh crore.”

In a move to boost domestic manufactur­ing in the country, Ms Sitharaman also raised import duty on a variety of products ranging from tableware and kitchenwar­e to electrical appliances to footwear, furniture, stationery and toys, while at the same time, she provided funds to help farmers set up solar power generation units and set up coal storages to transport perishable­s.

Keeping labour-intensive sectors in MSME as critical for employment generation, the finance minister also pointed out that cheap and low-quality imports are an impediment to their growth. “Special attention has been taken to put measured restraint on import of those items which are being produced by our MSMEs with better quality. Keeping in view the need of this sector, customs duty is being raised on items like footwear and furniture,” she said.

I believe that this budget will increase income and investment, increase demand and consumptio­n

— NARENDRA MODI, Prime Minister

THE NEW tax regime shall be optional for the taxpayers. The government intends to remove all Income-Tax exemptions in the long run.

NIRMALA SITHARAMAN,

Finance minister

I did not see any concrete, strategic idea that could help our youngsters get jobs.

— RAHUL GANDHI, Congress leader

With the finance minister’s announceme­nts, India Inc welcomed the Budget, while at the same time economists and opposition were muted in their reactions. On the other hand, the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex stocks index extended its decline to as much as 1.9 per cent on Saturday.

Nosediving nearly 1,275 points from the day’s high, the 30-share BSE Sensex ended 987.96 points, after the Union Budget failed to live up to market expectatio­ns of growth-boosting measures and fiscal discipline. Besides, investors’ wealth of about `3.46 lakh crore has been wiped off from the system as well.

As far as personal tax cut of individual­s is concerned, Ms Sitharaman wanted more money should come in individual’s hand, and thereby slashed the income tax, which would help save about `31,000 a year in tax for persons with annual income of up to `17 lakh.

It was, however, conditione­d on current exemptions and deductions including standard deduction for `50,000 as well as the waiver earned on payment of up to `1.5 lakh in tuition fee of children, and contributi­on towards insurance premium and provident fund, being given up.

However, the finance minister also clarified that the new tax regime would be optional for taxpayers. Under the proposed I-T slab, annual income up to `2.5 lakh is exempt from tax. Those individual­s earning between `2.5 lakh and

`5 lakh will pay 5 per cent tax. A 10 per cent tax will be charged on income between `5 and 7.5 lakh,

15 per cent, 20 per cent and 25 per cent on next

`2.5 lakh each and 30 per cent on income above

`15 lakh. Alongside, the limit of insurance cover in case of bank failure on deposits was increased to

`5 lakh from `1 lakh and a sale of government stake in the country’s largest insurer LIC also announced as well.

For farm and rural sectors, she also allocated

`2.83 lakh crore and fixed

`15 lakh crore target for financing agricultur­e credit. Another `1.7 lakh crore spending was planned for transport infrastruc­ture and `40,740 crore allocation was made for the energy sector.

Ms Sitharaman proposed new tax slabs of 15 per cent and 25 per cent in addition to the existing slabs.

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