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Budget 2014: Excise cuts, tight fisc with some poll sops Courtesy : The Financial Express

Despite the backdrop of a Rs 76,965-crore shortfall in tax collections for FY14 and Rs 29,973 crore in disinvestment, finance minister P. Chidambaram managed to better market expectations by restricting the fiscal deficit to 4.6% of GDP (see graphic on how he managed this). The target for FY15 has been kept at 4.1% — expenditure will rise 10.9% versus FY14’s 12.5% — lower than the 4.2% the markets expected. As a result, the year’s borrowings target is Rs 4,57,321 crore versus FY14’s Rs 4,68,902 crore — bond yields fell marginally in response.

Sharp excise duty cuts — from 12% to 8% for small cars, scooters, motorcycles and commercial vehicles — were effected to stimulate demand, and both defence pensioners and students were targeted by specific incentives. In the case of defence pensioners, ‘one rank, one pension’ was formally agreed to, and an interest waiver of Rs 2,600 crore was given for 9 lakh student loans. At the end of trading, the automobile index was up 0.76% and the overall Sensex 0.48%. Chidambaram said the tax cuts could cost around Rs 800 crore in a full month in case this did not result in a sharp pick-up in automobile sales. For mobile phones, the cut in duties was even more dramatic, to 6% with Cenvat credit or 1% without Cenvat credit. Excise duties were cut from 12% to 10% for capital goods as well as consumer non-durables falling under Chapter 84 and 85 of the excise act.
Though an interim budget cannot announce too much by way of new policies, or direct tax changes, Chidambaram pointed out that while loans to minority communities stood at Rs 211,451 crore at the end of December 2013, annual lending had gone up from a mere Rs 4,000 crore a decade ago to Rs 66,500 crore in FY13.

Though the drop in tax collections was along expected lines, what came as a surprise was the complete collapse in disinvestment receipts since most had factored in Rs 17,000-18,000 crore of funds from the sale of the government’s residual stake in Hindustan Zinc and Balco. But, the expenditure secretary said, there was some procedural work that would not get completed in the current fiscal— in which case, this is a bonus for the next government and would help achieve the seemingly excessive Rs 56,925 crore FY15 target.

For some reason, the budget did not reflect the results of the telecom auctions either.

Assuming that firms pay just the minimum amount of the amount they bid, the budget should have ended up with around Rs 5,000 crore extra inflows.

Possibly when the revised numbers for the deficit come in, they could end up being lower than the 4.6% shown in the revised estimates.

Surprisingly, despite the economy being sluggish, as well as the sharp cuts in excise duties, the budget has targeted a tax growth of 19% in FY15. That a similar growth was targeted for FY14 didn’t dent the taxman’s ambition though, when asked about this at the press conference later, the finance minister said a person’s reach had to be greater than his grasp.

As in FY14, the budget also appears to have under-provided on critical areas of subsidies. Given that Rs 35,000 crore of petroleum subsidies due in FY14 have been

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During my 37-year-old career with Income Tax department, I moved from place to place, post to post. For me, every posting was a challenge, and at the same time an opportunity to deliver.

After my retirement as Chairman of Central Board of Direct Taxes, I was invited by various institutions and NGOs to deliver talks on tax matters. While advising taxpayers across sectors, I noticed, our vast salaried class including armed and paramilitary forces, pensioners or senior citizens, NRIs, professionals and small business establishments need the right guidance. Most taxpayers do comply with their tax obligations fully. Yet, they are not somehow relaxed and are burdened with anxieties. A large number of taxpayers are not even aware that getting tax refund on time is a basic right.

In one such meeting, a middle-aged man quizzed me why could not I give tax advice 24X7. For a moment, I had no answer. He then added that I should give tax solutions online so that he does not need to come from a remote place to attend my lecture. I thanked him for his suggestion.

For a while I was restless. Already I had got myself enrolled as a Member of the Bar Council of Delhi and as an Advocate of Delhi High Court Bar Association, thanks to my law degree from the University of Allahabad. Yet, I was not sure how I could help the vast majority of taxpayers who somehow maintain a safe distance from the taxmen. I then tossed the idea of creating a tax think-tank with some of my former colleagues and highly spirited individuals. All of us immediately agreed on one count: millions of Indian taxpayers expect to access tailor-made tax research materials and seek guidance from those who have been parts of the tax machinery for decades.

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