The
Union Budget 2015- Your Lust As Her Will
Your
Lust As Her Will- Gaius Valerius Catullus
Similarly the fiscal deficit, maintained
at 4.1% this year, is projected to reduce to 3% over the next three years. The
Current Account deficit, presently at 1.3% , is likely to go into a surplus
perhaps in the course of the latter quarters of 2015 itself.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is
expected to be contained within 5%, and inflation being a major obsession with
the RBI, may prompt it to start cutting interest rates afresh very soon now. Industry would like to see it reduce by
at least 400 basis points, or 4%, in the course of this administration, with
the first 1% in 2015. Let us see if these wishes do become horses to do their
bit for the revival of the investment cycle.
The economy may not be roaring like a
‘tiger’, as yet, as Arvind Subramanian put it yesterday while presenting the
annual Economic Survey, but it is headed that way. Subramanian too spoke of
double-digit growth, and being in a ‘sweet spot’, caused in some measure because
of soft petroleum prices and global deflation.
In the Budget, a crack-down on black
money, held domestically and abroad, with jail terms of up to 10 years, and
punitive 300% penalties, was announced. The parallel economy may now think it
wise to start merging with the official one. Benami property buying too will be fraught with danger because the
Government intends taking a very dim view of it.
There
is also some talk of a voluntary disclosure scheme coming up before the
necessary laws are enacted, and this may provide a new revenue stream to the
cash-strapped Government. The Centre now only keeps 38% of Government revenues,
while the States, in line with Modi’s emphasis on greater autonomy and
federalism, get 62%.
Incentives have also been announced to
monetize an estimated 20,000 plus tonnes of gold held in private hands, via
Gold Bonds, India’s own gold coins with the Ashok Chakra motif, Government
administered loans against physical gold etc., all designed to tap into this
massive resource for the benefit of the economy. Individual PAN will now be recorded for transactions above Rs. 1 lakh. This flavour of accountability is continued with the corporatization of ports with their substantial land banks, and disinvestment, including loss-making PSUs, to the tune of $6.7 billion.
There is a push to deepen the debt market to boost the foreign investment under all heads from its present $ 55 billion, and grow it manifold. There is a bankruptcy law coming up and A Debt Market Board with greater integration with SEBI.
The Government itself will be investing
an additional Rs. 70,000 crores into infrastructure and raising far more via a
slew of newly announced tax free bonds. There is also a $ 40 billion ambition
for Defence, including ‘Make in India’ for the sector, but this will have to be
enhanced considerably, in both money and technology terms, by foreign
collaborators.
There is also the long and somewhat
detailed emphasis on integrating the facilities for Bharat with those offered
to India. For the first time ever, there is a real effort to establish a
universal social security foundation for the poor, inclusive of health
insurance, life insurance and a pension.
Foreigners, who are expected to put in
the big money much beyond what this budget can afford, are delighted. This is
nearly comprehensive and forward looking, a growth budget coming from the one
‘bright spot’ in the global economy as international rating agency S&P put it.
A prospective, as opposed to
retrospective, GAAR has been kicked down the pike by 2 years at least. The
UPA’s Direct Tax Code has been mined for its gems and given a quiet burial. GST,
the indirect tax structure that will both raise the revenue intake and reduce
corruption and evasion, will be
implemented by April 1, 2016.
Wealth Tax stands abolished. Corporate
taxes will be reduced from 30% to 25% over the next four years. Income tax
exemptions have been raised to add up to Rs. 4.42 lakhs if availed in full.
This, after the tax slabs themselves were raised in the ‘half-budget’ of June
2014.
Almost every section of the Indian
public has been addressed including the disabled. The emphasis on pensions for
the poor is part of what Finance Minister Arun Jaitley called ‘Banking the
unbanked, funding the unfunded’. The abolition of the essentially vindictive
Wealth Tax, a dinosaur from classic socialist theory, in favour of a modest
surcharge of 2% for taxable income above Rs 1 crore per annum is a sagacious
move.
A greater emphasis on health care for
the middle class with an exemption of premium of Rs.25,000/- up from Rs.
15,000/- recognises the increasing cost
of private healthcare run for profit.
In welfare schemes, the laudable
approach is to cut leakage and not the subsidy itself via massive direct
transfers and digitization. Old UPA flagship schemes like MNREGA to provide
minimum employment for the rural poor, have not only been continued but funded
generously. Rural credit has been enhanced right down to the micro level and the vast post-office network across the country has been pressed into service as a ‘payment bank’. The mission to provide housing for all has been given definition by specifying 2 lakh urban homes and 4 lakh rural homes of about 800 sq.ft size that will be built by 2022, all with round-the-clock water and electricity, and access to a road.
Mostly stable indirect taxes, have
however been augmented with a consolidated Service tax at 14% up from the
earlier 12.36%.
Tourism, long on its indifferent growth
path, was vastly boosted in 2014 with Modi’s initiative to allow 43 countries
to avail of a visa on arrival. This is now going to be enhanced to 150
countries.
Ease of doing business is demonstrated
by consolidating 14 different clearances required at one window.
Higher educational institutions and health
facilities have been announced, with special care to target those states where
the BJP expects to make new inroads, such as Assam, West Bengal,
Orissa, Bihar, as well as those where a thank-you is in order, such as
Arunachal Pradesh and J&K.
Youth loans, R&D, clean energy,
incentives for the local electronics industry, the laundry list is long and
deep, but it has to said: This is a good budget.
For:
Swarajyamag.com(1,187 words)
February 28th, 2015
Gautam Mukherjee
No comments:
Post a Comment