In
a bold move, Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman has surprised the markets by
announcing mega cuts in corporate taxes on September 20 in the hope of fanning
animal spirits of the economy: reduced the tax rate for all companies that do
not avail any exemption from the present 30% to 22%, and inclusive of Cess and
surcharge, the effective tax rate for such firms stands reduced from 34.94% to
25.17%. Secondly, tax for companies getting incorporated on or after October 1
this year and commencing production by March 31, 2023 stands reduced to 15%
from the present 25% and inclusive of Cess and surcharge the tax rate comes to
17%. Thirdly, the minimum alternate tax paid by zero tax companies has been
reduced from the current 25% to 15%. There were also some less significant
changes such as removal of surcharge on capital gains on buying and selling of
equities and changes made in applicable tax on share buyback program of
companies.
According
to a Crisil report, these tax cuts are likely to enable around 1,000 companies
to save about Rs 37,000 cr. These cuts are however likely to benefit large
companies such as Reliance, Tata, Vedanta and Adani more than the mid-sized
firms. It is also felt that firms from the consumer segment will benefit more
by these cuts, for their current effective tax rates are a little over 30%,
while exports-linked sectors such as IT and Pharma would benefit the least for
they are already enjoying low effective tax rates. The benefits are thus not
uniform across the board.
On
the down side, the government has to forgo revenues worth Rs 1.45 lakh cr
during the current fiscal itself. Nevertheless, it is gung-ho about the cuts,
for it believes it is an all-cure pill for the current ailments of the economy.
Even the industry Moghuls appear to be superb-excited about the cuts, for in
one stroke these changes have made our tax-structure comparable with the best
of the lot. No doubt it will boost Corporate India’s confidence as it makes
their production more competitive in the global markets. And all this
cumulatively well reflected when the investors from the Dalal Street—perhaps,
treating the tax-breaks as a Diwali-gift—simply lifted the benchmark indices
with a historic one day rise of 5.32%.
Now
the big question is: Will the tax-cuts translate into higher consumer incomes
thereby giving boost to domestic demand, the much desired fuel for lifting the
growth? An honest answer is, perhaps: ‘No’ (in the short run), but ‘Yes’ in the
long run. For, although the tax cuts are certain to swell the profits of
companies and make them more bullish than before, it may not drive companies go
for fresh investments, unless demand picks up. And demand for consumption would
not grow unless greater purchasing power is put in the hands of the less
privileged of the society—who unfortunately constitutes about 60% of the
population—through public spending.
That
aside, even if corporates come forward to invest in new projects, banks, being
shy of taking fresh exposure to business groups with whom they are still
litigating about recovering bad loans, may not be enthusiastic enough to lend
fresh credit. Secondly, banks’ balance sheets are not that strong enough to go
all out to increase their credit portfolio. Thus, it is evident that the rate
cuts cannot by themselves change the near-term growth prospects.
Nevertheless,
the big talking point from these cuts is 15% tax on new companies setting up
new manufacturing units. This certainly makes India an attractive destination
for a host of foreign firms, particularly those who are moving out of China in
search of greener pastures. Even here again, all this happens with a lag
effect.
But
what is certain to happen immediately is: rise in fiscal deficit unless,
investments intensify and growth picks up and the resulting tax-buoyancy
reduces this figure. The tax rate cuts along with exports- and
housing-incentives announced earlier put together are estimated to come to 0.5%
of GDP. Of which having got 86,000 cr from the RBI in excess of what it has
budgeted, the government is likely to end up with a hole of 59,000 cr and thus
be able to contain the fiscal deficit at around 3.4 to 3.8% of GDP—a tad higher
than what was budgeted for.
That
said, one must hail the government for making big bets to give a boost to the
economy, albeit in the long run. Now that the government has pulled the fiscal
and monetary levers simultaneously, let us hope that Corporates catch up
government’s expectation and nudge GDP to grow if not in the near-term, at
least in the long run.
No comments:
Post a Comment