OdishaPlus Bureau

nirmala sitharaman

When Nirmala Sitharaman unwrapped her maiden Budget in a four-fold red cloth, there was an air of ebullience. The two themes that stole the limelight were electric vehicles and affordable housing, thanks to the additional income-tax deduction of Rs 1.5 lakh each on the interest on loans taken to buy them.

On the flip side, she picked a global practice of taxing the super-rich and jacked up the peak effective tax rate to 39% to 42.7%, higher than the US, where the super-rich are taxed at a maximum of 40%. A pro-poor move, it needs to be seen how much revenue will come in through the new source of tax mop-up. Targeting a seemingly-difficult fiscal deficit target of 3.3% of GDP,Sitharaman didn’t look perturbed.

She announced an aggressive disinvestment target of Rs 1.05 lakh crore as another revenue prop to meet her growth initiatives. Though there was no stimulus to pump up growth, the government said it would recapitalize the public sector banks by introducing another Rs 70,000 crore to stimulate growth .On the expenditure side, $11 billion was set aside for rural initiatives and nearly as much for a capital boost to banks.

economic survey 2018-19

For an immediate mop-up of revenue, she hiked the price of petrol and diesel by Rs 2.She expanded the pension scheme and lowered corporate tax while laying out a plan to see that companies are made more publicly owned. Keeping the rural poor in mind, the Budget targeted building 19.5 million rural homes over the next two years, bringing 30 million small retailers under the pension scheme that provides 100 million informal sector workers with a pension of Rs 3,000 a month.

She also provided corporate tax relief to a wider network of companies. All companies with a turnover of Rs 400 crore will have to pay a corporate tax of 25%. Earlier, this relief was available only to companies with a turnover of Rs 250 crore.The FM said the government will launch an inter-operable ATM-like ‘One Nation One Card’ for pan-India travel, new rental laws for affordable housing, interest subvention scheme for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises and women.

BUDGET 19 NEW

To improve digital transactions, she has introduced a tax deduction at source (TDS) of 2% on all cash withdrawals of Rs 1 crore a year. Start-ups registered with ‘Startup India’ will be exempt from angel tax, a long-pending demand of the sector. The government has now allowed investors to re-invest their capital gains (from sale of real estate) into start-ups and claim exemption of these amounts from tax; and their funds would not come under the scrutiny of the income-tax department.

The one important message is that the government believes the infrastructure and construction sectors hold the key to not just growth, but also job creation. It has sought to complement its own infrastructure-building initiatives with efforts to revive the housing sector through a model tenancy law and tax sops buyers of affordable homes.Overall, not a bad budget.