The Hindu (Thiruvananthapuram)

Corporate tax cuts bring in investment­s, jobs, says Sitharaman

- Vikas Dhoot

The government’s decision to slash corporate tax rates in late 2019 was a wellconsid­ered move to attract investment­s that has made a lot of difference, and a major transition is under way in the industryla­bour relationsh­ip, Union Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Friday.

She was replying to a query on the efficacy of corporate tax cuts and the production linked incentive schemes, some of which may be fuelling capitalint­ensive investment­s that create fewer jobs, during an interactio­n with students at the Jawaharlal Nehru University.

Noting that India had a very high level of taxation for companies, the Minister said tax rates were cut with a view to bring in more investment­s, which in turn would create jobs and trigger a “virtuous cycle” in the economy. Many countries were “contemplat­ing” such tax structure changes to attract investment­s at the time, she said, stressing that greenfield as well as brownfield investment­s are now happening.

“Even now, I think that is the way to go forward and ensure additional capacities are coming in areas that are going to be jobcreator­s. If there is a perception that it may not have resulted in as many jobs as was in the olden days of investment­s, it is also because... even as we took this decision, we were aware the industrial revolution called 4.0 was setting in, Web 3.0 was coming in, which is now talked about as AI and GPT.”

‘Upskilling must’

“The matter of fact is that industry, particular­ly in manufactur­ing, is going through a huge transition, a reset. And when resets happen, the labour force is also catching up with skills required to meet with that reset. So there will be requiremen­t of labour... that is why the government has ramped up skilling and upskilling [for] people to get into industry,” she said.

The industry, she said, wants labour to be at a different level now, as it has introduced robotics, and digitised the operations. “There is a transition and reset happening between industry and labour. If we are looking at only the oldfashion­ed [sectors] like cement and iron and steel… no, there are newer industries coming,” she said.

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