The Hindu (Erode)

Private Sector Banks

As the financial year ends and we get caught up in the taxplannin­g urgency, beware of panic buying leading to ill thoughtout decisions

- K. Nitya Kalyani

For years, investing to avoid tax was a limited to a few, wellknown options. Life insurance policy, Employee Provident Fund or Public Provident Fund and a few more.

We have a wider choice now and so much else has changed around this activity of investing to reduce taxes.

The most important of them is that investing to get a tax break, under various sections of Section 80 of the Incometax Act, 1961, is on its way out.

In the ‘new tax regime’, you pay lower taxes and cannot avail of any tax saving investment. A couple of years ago you had to opt to move to the new tax regime. Last year, the new tax regime was the default and you had to opt for the old tax regime if you needed to stay on. It is clear that the old tax regime will go. When, it’s not been said but in two or three years is an intelligen­t guess.

What does this imply for your yearend flurry?

Section 80 investment­s can be onetime commitment­s or repeat investment­s. Onetime commitment­s like PPF, tax saving fixed deposits or National Savings Certificate mean that you can invest as much or as little as you like in one year and not at all, or a very minimal amount, the next. A life insurance policy, on the other hand usually means repeated premium payment for several years on end with the policy validity actually depending on your paying up regularly.

If, or rather when, Section 80 benefits end, and you have one of the former type of investment­s its flexibility is going to work to your advantage. Unless it is intrinsica­lly a beneficial investment and you can afford the outlay, you should avoid investing further.

However, if you have one of the latter, like a life insurance policy, you will still have to keep your life policy going. And please do so!

Going forward, if you are investing just to save tax, keep this in mind and opt for a onetime, payasyouli­ke instrument. Of course, repeat commitment­s like life insurance should be in your reckoning, but only ever buy it for its real purpose, and not to save tax.

Either way, keep the financial commitment­s you have made and don’t make past investment­s a lost cause!

(The writer is a business journalist specialisi­ng in insurance & corporate history)

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