Saturday, 24 January 2015

Income tax, excise duty, more

Finance Minister P. Chidambaram today left direct taxes untouched except for continuing the income tax surcharge on 'super-rich' individuals and corporates in the Interim Budget 2014. Chidambaram also slashed excise duty on cars and two-wheelers, and capital goods and consumer durables to boost manufacturing and growth. Here are the Budget 2014 highlights:
* Income tax rates kept unchanged;
* 10 pc surcharge on 'super-rich' having annual income above Rs 1 crore to continue;
* 5 pc surcharge on corporates with turnover of Rs 10 cr
* Foodgrain production estimated at 263 million tonnes in
2013-14;
* Fiscal deficit at 4.6 pc in 2013-14 and 4.1 pc next year, revenue deficit at 3 pc in 2013-14;
* Current Account Deficit to be USD 45 bn as against USD 88 bn in 2012-13;
* Excise duty on small cars, motorcycles and commercial vehicles cut from 12 to 8 pc;
* Excise duty on SUVs cut from 30 to 24 pc
* Large and mid-segment cars from 27-24 pc to 24-20 pc
* Excise duty on mobile handset to be 6 pc on CENVAT
credit to encourage domestic production
* Excise duty cut on capital goods, non consumer durables cut from 12 to 10 per cent
* Moratorium on interest on student loans taken before March 31, 2009; to benefit 9 lakh borrowers
* USD 15 bn addition to forex exchange in 2013-14;
* Disinvestment target for FY14 cut to Rs 16,027 cr versus Rs 40,000 cr; next year govt eyeing Rs 36,925 cr;
* Lowers residual stake sale target to Rs 3,000 cr from Rs 14,000 cr for this fiscal;
* Govt obtains information in 67 cases of illegal offshore accounts of Indians;
* Govt's net borrowing in next fiscal to be Rs 4.57 lakh cr;
* Plan expenditure cut by Rs 79,790 cr for current fiscal;
* Allocates Rs 1,000 cr more to Nirbhaya Fund;
* CCI cleared 296 projects worth Rs 6.6 lakh cr by end Jan;
* GDP to grow by at least 5.2 pc in Q3 and Q4 in 2013-14;
* Plan expenditure for 2014-15 at Rs 5.55 lakh cr and non-plan at Rs 12.08 lakh cr;
* Govt to infuse Rs 11,200 cr in PSU banks next fiscal;
*Government gets Rs 88,188 cr as dividend from PSUs, Rs 14,000 crore more than budgeted
* PSUs to achieve record capex of Rs 2.57 lakh crore in 2013-14,
* 500 MW fast breeder test reactor in Kalpakkam to be ready shortly; 7 nuclear power reactors under construction.
The full Budget of 2014-15 is going to be the first official opportunity to implement the economic agenda where in Government will have to do a fine but difficult task of managing the conflicting needs of variety of stakeholders – business & industry, trade, commerce, exporters, banks, investors, agriculturists, house-holds, society and politics as well. The forthcoming budget should not only be investor friendly and taxpayer friendly but also be forward looking and progressive giving policy directions and accelerating growth.
Initiated by earlier NDA Government, GST has been talked about by all Governments since then. Now that we have a stable Government, the Budget should clearly redefine the road map to much awaited GST and announce a sunset date for the transition to GST regime. It could be 2015 or even 2016, given the issues pending with the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST.

The BJP Government is likely to make implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a priority as it gets down to work. The Finance Minister held a meeting with officials of the Revenue Department of direct tax and indirect tax to get an overview of the taxation issues. The Revenue Department has been asked to prepare a presentation for the new Finance Minister, detailing the features and architecture of GST, the areas of disagreement with State Governments and other issues that have delayed the implementation of the indirect tax regime. The Finance Minister is also expected to soon meet various State Finance Ministers to sort out differences and ensure an early rollout of GST. It is hoped that new Government may be able to move the official amendments to the Constitution Amendment Bill, key to the introduction of GST in the monsoon session of Parliament.
It has already been hinted out that the Government is keen on early rollout of GST. The BJP manifesto had promised to bring on board all State Governments in adopting GST. Earlier Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh were opposed to GST format but since both these states are governed by the same ruling party as at the centre, there is bound to be greater harmony this time which may pave a way for earlier implementation. Finance Minster will have to build consensus about the GST among State Governments. GST ought to be the top priority in the Budget.
On indirect tax front, while there is a need for systemic reforms and forward looking pro-growth steps in general, the Budget should lay emphasis on the following specific issues, besides laying a clear-cut road map for GST implementation:
  • Simplification of tax / duty structure with few rates at least for one year till economy is back in black
  • Reduction of Excise and Service Tax rates by atleast two percent to boost production, growth in services and address inflation
  • Abolish education cesses and have separate allocation for the same
  • Remove confusion and double taxation / overlapping tax regime with simultaneous levy of VAT as well as Service Tax in certain cases
  • There should be no tax on tax and definition of sale consideration must be amended in all VAT laws. This will reduce considerable confusion and avoid litigation
  • Refunds in Excise and Service Tax should be made simpler, faster and hassle free
  • Benefits / exemption to special economic zones be rationalized
  • There should be no retrospective tax provisions which give rise to tax liability. There has to be no room for uncertainty
  • Multiple audits and investigations must be stopped. There should be single point jurisdiction for enquires, investigation, audit, adjudication etc.
  • Presently adjudication has no prescribed limits. A time limit for adjudication process to be completed must be specified. Not only this, there should be time limit for issuing orders after personal hearing is done (say 2 months). Erring officials ought to be penalized
  • The present law does not provide for transferring the cases to call book where cases are pending at higher / appellate forums but this practice is followed blatantly. Such practice only hampers the process and adversely impacts both-revenue as well as tax payer as tax liability continues without recovery and assessee is burdened with the risk of interest, in the event of demand getting confirmed.
  • Routine aggressive stand on investigations and during search may be avoided. Arrests be made only when recovery is not forthcoming even after allowing time / opportunity
  • Tax administration ought to be made more accountable and assessee friendly
  • Tax reforms must also look at lowering of compliance costs.
  • Cenvat credit mechanism may be made simpler and reduce administrative cost
  • Excise duty cuts shall boost industrial growth and consumption
  • Tax audit on the lines of income tax may be introduced in Service Tax
  • Department officers ought to be trained in law, interpretation and time management skills
  • CST rates may be lowered in the wake of GST.
So far as tax administration and reforms are concerned, it is expected that besides introducing DTC and GST at the earliest, it should aim at enhancing efficiency in tax administration, cutting down on tax collection costs, making law simpler and reducing tax litigation
- See more at: http://taxguru.in/excise-duty/expectations-budget-201415-indirect-taxes.html#sthash.KMnwnXWA.dpuf
The full Budget of 2014-15 is going to be the first official opportunity to implement the economic agenda where in Government will have to do a fine but difficult task of managing the conflicting needs of variety of stakeholders – business & industry, trade, commerce, exporters, banks, investors, agriculturists, house-holds, society and politics as well. The forthcoming budget should not only be investor friendly and taxpayer friendly but also be forward looking and progressive giving policy directions and accelerating growth.
Initiated by earlier NDA Government, GST has been talked about by all Governments since then. Now that we have a stable Government, the Budget should clearly redefine the road map to much awaited GST and announce a sunset date for the transition to GST regime. It could be 2015 or even 2016, given the issues pending with the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST.
The BJP Government is likely to make implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a priority as it gets down to work. The Finance Minister held a meeting with officials of the Revenue Department of direct tax and indirect tax to get an overview of the taxation issues. The Revenue Department has been asked to prepare a presentation for the new Finance Minister, detailing the features and architecture of GST, the areas of disagreement with State Governments and other issues that have delayed the implementation of the indirect tax regime. The Finance Minister is also expected to soon meet various State Finance Ministers to sort out differences and ensure an early rollout of GST. It is hoped that new Government may be able to move the official amendments to the Constitution Amendment Bill, key to the introduction of GST in the monsoon session of Parliament.
It has already been hinted out that the Government is keen on early rollout of GST. The BJP manifesto had promised to bring on board all State Governments in adopting GST. Earlier Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh were opposed to GST format but since both these states are governed by the same ruling party as at the centre, there is bound to be greater harmony this time which may pave a way for earlier implementation. Finance Minster will have to build consensus about the GST among State Governments. GST ought to be the top priority in the Budget.
On indirect tax front, while there is a need for systemic reforms and forward looking pro-growth steps in general, the Budget should lay emphasis on the following specific issues, besides laying a clear-cut road map for GST implementation:
  • Simplification of tax / duty structure with few rates at least for one year till economy is back in black
  • Reduction of Excise and Service Tax rates by atleast two percent to boost production, growth in services and address inflation
  • Abolish education cesses and have separate allocation for the same
  • Remove confusion and double taxation / overlapping tax regime with simultaneous levy of VAT as well as Service Tax in certain cases
  • There should be no tax on tax and definition of sale consideration must be amended in all VAT laws. This will reduce considerable confusion and avoid litigation
  • Refunds in Excise and Service Tax should be made simpler, faster and hassle free
  • Benefits / exemption to special economic zones be rationalized
  • There should be no retrospective tax provisions which give rise to tax liability. There has to be no room for uncertainty
  • Multiple audits and investigations must be stopped. There should be single point jurisdiction for enquires, investigation, audit, adjudication etc.
  • Presently adjudication has no prescribed limits. A time limit for adjudication process to be completed must be specified. Not only this, there should be time limit for issuing orders after personal hearing is done (say 2 months). Erring officials ought to be penalized
  • The present law does not provide for transferring the cases to call book where cases are pending at higher / appellate forums but this practice is followed blatantly. Such practice only hampers the process and adversely impacts both-revenue as well as tax payer as tax liability continues without recovery and assessee is burdened with the risk of interest, in the event of demand getting confirmed.
  • Routine aggressive stand on investigations and during search may be avoided. Arrests be made only when recovery is not forthcoming even after allowing time / opportunity
  • Tax administration ought to be made more accountable and assessee friendly
  • Tax reforms must also look at lowering of compliance costs.
  • Cenvat credit mechanism may be made simpler and reduce administrative cost
  • Excise duty cuts shall boost industrial growth and consumption
  • Tax audit on the lines of income tax may be introduced in Service Tax
  • Department officers ought to be trained in law, interpretation and time management skills
  • CST rates may be lowered in the wake of GST.
So far as tax administration and reforms are concerned, it is expected that besides introducing DTC and GST at the earliest, it should aim at enhancing efficiency in tax administration, cutting down on tax collection costs, making law simpler and reducing tax litigation
- See more at: http://taxguru.in/excise-duty/expectations-budget-201415-indirect-taxes.html#sthash.KMnwnXWA.dpuf
The full Budget of 2014-15 is going to be the first official opportunity to implement the economic agenda where in Government will have to do a fine but difficult task of managing the conflicting needs of variety of stakeholders – business & industry, trade, commerce, exporters, banks, investors, agriculturists, house-holds, society and politics as well. The forthcoming budget should not only be investor friendly and taxpayer friendly but also be forward looking and progressive giving policy directions and accelerating growth.
Initiated by earlier NDA Government, GST has been talked about by all Governments since then. Now that we have a stable Government, the Budget should clearly redefine the road map to much awaited GST and announce a sunset date for the transition to GST regime. It could be 2015 or even 2016, given the issues pending with the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST.
The BJP Government is likely to make implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a priority as it gets down to work. The Finance Minister held a meeting with officials of the Revenue Department of direct tax and indirect tax to get an overview of the taxation issues. The Revenue Department has been asked to prepare a presentation for the new Finance Minister, detailing the features and architecture of GST, the areas of disagreement with State Governments and other issues that have delayed the implementation of the indirect tax regime. The Finance Minister is also expected to soon meet various State Finance Ministers to sort out differences and ensure an early rollout of GST. It is hoped that new Government may be able to move the official amendments to the Constitution Amendment Bill, key to the introduction of GST in the monsoon session of Parliament.
It has already been hinted out that the Government is keen on early rollout of GST. The BJP manifesto had promised to bring on board all State Governments in adopting GST. Earlier Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh were opposed to GST format but since both these states are governed by the same ruling party as at the centre, there is bound to be greater harmony this time which may pave a way for earlier implementation. Finance Minster will have to build consensus about the GST among State Governments. GST ought to be the top priority in the Budget.
On indirect tax front, while there is a need for systemic reforms and forward looking pro-growth steps in general, the Budget should lay emphasis on the following specific issues, besides laying a clear-cut road map for GST implementation:
  • Simplification of tax / duty structure with few rates at least for one year till economy is back in black
  • Reduction of Excise and Service Tax rates by atleast two percent to boost production, growth in services and address inflation
  • Abolish education cesses and have separate allocation for the same
  • Remove confusion and double taxation / overlapping tax regime with simultaneous levy of VAT as well as Service Tax in certain cases
  • There should be no tax on tax and definition of sale consideration must be amended in all VAT laws. This will reduce considerable confusion and avoid litigation
  • Refunds in Excise and Service Tax should be made simpler, faster and hassle free
  • Benefits / exemption to special economic zones be rationalized
  • There should be no retrospective tax provisions which give rise to tax liability. There has to be no room for uncertainty
  • Multiple audits and investigations must be stopped. There should be single point jurisdiction for enquires, investigation, audit, adjudication etc.
  • Presently adjudication has no prescribed limits. A time limit for adjudication process to be completed must be specified. Not only this, there should be time limit for issuing orders after personal hearing is done (say 2 months). Erring officials ought to be penalized
  • The present law does not provide for transferring the cases to call book where cases are pending at higher / appellate forums but this practice is followed blatantly. Such practice only hampers the process and adversely impacts both-revenue as well as tax payer as tax liability continues without recovery and assessee is burdened with the risk of interest, in the event of demand getting confirmed.
  • Routine aggressive stand on investigations and during search may be avoided. Arrests be made only when recovery is not forthcoming even after allowing time / opportunity
  • Tax administration ought to be made more accountable and assessee friendly
  • Tax reforms must also look at lowering of compliance costs.
  • Cenvat credit mechanism may be made simpler and reduce administrative cost
  • Excise duty cuts shall boost industrial growth and consumption
  • Tax audit on the lines of income tax may be introduced in Service Tax
  • Department officers ought to be trained in law, interpretation and time management skills
  • CST rates may be lowered in the wake of GST.
So far as tax administration and reforms are concerned, it is expected that besides introducing DTC and GST at the earliest, it should aim at enhancing efficiency in tax administration, cutting down on tax collection costs, making law simpler and reducing tax litigation
- See more at: http://taxguru.in/excise-duty/expectations-budget-201415-indirect-taxes.html#sthash.KMnwnXWA.dpuf
The full Budget of 2014-15 is going to be the first official opportunity to implement the economic agenda where in Government will have to do a fine but difficult task of managing the conflicting needs of variety of stakeholders – business & industry, trade, commerce, exporters, banks, investors, agriculturists, house-holds, society and politics as well. The forthcoming budget should not only be investor friendly and taxpayer friendly but also be forward looking and progressive giving policy directions and accelerating growth.
Initiated by earlier NDA Government, GST has been talked about by all Governments since then. Now that we have a stable Government, the Budget should clearly redefine the road map to much awaited GST and announce a sunset date for the transition to GST regime. It could be 2015 or even 2016, given the issues pending with the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST.
The BJP Government is likely to make implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a priority as it gets down to work. The Finance Minister held a meeting with officials of the Revenue Department of direct tax and indirect tax to get an overview of the taxation issues. The Revenue Department has been asked to prepare a presentation for the new Finance Minister, detailing the features and architecture of GST, the areas of disagreement with State Governments and other issues that have delayed the implementation of the indirect tax regime. The Finance Minister is also expected to soon meet various State Finance Ministers to sort out differences and ensure an early rollout of GST. It is hoped that new Government may be able to move the official amendments to the Constitution Amendment Bill, key to the introduction of GST in the monsoon session of Parliament.
It has already been hinted out that the Government is keen on early rollout of GST. The BJP manifesto had promised to bring on board all State Governments in adopting GST. Earlier Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh were opposed to GST format but since both these states are governed by the same ruling party as at the centre, there is bound to be greater harmony this time which may pave a way for earlier implementation. Finance Minster will have to build consensus about the GST among State Governments. GST ought to be the top priority in the Budget.
On indirect tax front, while there is a need for systemic reforms and forward looking pro-growth steps in general, the Budget should lay emphasis on the following specific issues, besides laying a clear-cut road map for GST implementation:
  • Simplification of tax / duty structure with few rates at least for one year till economy is back in black
  • Reduction of Excise and Service Tax rates by atleast two percent to boost production, growth in services and address inflation
  • Abolish education cesses and have separate allocation for the same
  • Remove confusion and double taxation / overlapping tax regime with simultaneous levy of VAT as well as Service Tax in certain cases
  • There should be no tax on tax and definition of sale consideration must be amended in all VAT laws. This will reduce considerable confusion and avoid litigation
  • Refunds in Excise and Service Tax should be made simpler, faster and hassle free
  • Benefits / exemption to special economic zones be rationalized
  • There should be no retrospective tax provisions which give rise to tax liability. There has to be no room for uncertainty
  • Multiple audits and investigations must be stopped. There should be single point jurisdiction for enquires, investigation, audit, adjudication etc.
  • Presently adjudication has no prescribed limits. A time limit for adjudication process to be completed must be specified. Not only this, there should be time limit for issuing orders after personal hearing is done (say 2 months). Erring officials ought to be penalized
  • The present law does not provide for transferring the cases to call book where cases are pending at higher / appellate forums but this practice is followed blatantly. Such practice only hampers the process and adversely impacts both-revenue as well as tax payer as tax liability continues without recovery and assessee is burdened with the risk of interest, in the event of demand getting confirmed.
  • Routine aggressive stand on investigations and during search may be avoided. Arrests be made only when recovery is not forthcoming even after allowing time / opportunity
  • Tax administration ought to be made more accountable and assessee friendly
  • Tax reforms must also look at lowering of compliance costs.
  • Cenvat credit mechanism may be made simpler and reduce administrative cost
  • Excise duty cuts shall boost industrial growth and consumption
  • Tax audit on the lines of income tax may be introduced in Service Tax
  • Department officers ought to be trained in law, interpretation and time management skills
  • CST rates may be lowered in the wake of GST.
So far as tax administration and reforms are concerned, it is expected that besides introducing DTC and GST at the earliest, it should aim at enhancing efficiency in tax administration, cutting down on tax collection costs, making law simpler and reducing tax litigation
- See more at: http://taxguru.in/excise-duty/expectations-budget-201415-indirect-taxes.html#sthash.KMnwnXWA.dpuf
The full Budget of 2014-15 is going to be the first official opportunity to implement the economic agenda where in Government will have to do a fine but difficult task of managing the conflicting needs of variety of stakeholders – business & industry, trade, commerce, exporters, banks, investors, agriculturists, house-holds, society and politics as well. The forthcoming budget should not only be investor friendly and taxpayer friendly but also be forward looking and progressive giving policy directions and accelerating growth.
Initiated by earlier NDA Government, GST has been talked about by all Governments since then. Now that we have a stable Government, the Budget should clearly redefine the road map to much awaited GST and announce a sunset date for the transition to GST regime. It could be 2015 or even 2016, given the issues pending with the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST.
The BJP Government is likely to make implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a priority as it gets down to work. The Finance Minister held a meeting with officials of the Revenue Department of direct tax and indirect tax to get an overview of the taxation issues. The Revenue Department has been asked to prepare a presentation for the new Finance Minister, detailing the features and architecture of GST, the areas of disagreement with State Governments and other issues that have delayed the implementation of the indirect tax regime. The Finance Minister is also expected to soon meet various State Finance Ministers to sort out differences and ensure an early rollout of GST. It is hoped that new Government may be able to move the official amendments to the Constitution Amendment Bill, key to the introduction of GST in the monsoon session of Parliament.
It has already been hinted out that the Government is keen on early rollout of GST. The BJP manifesto had promised to bring on board all State Governments in adopting GST. Earlier Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh were opposed to GST format but since both these states are governed by the same ruling party as at the centre, there is bound to be greater harmony this time which may pave a way for earlier implementation. Finance Minster will have to build consensus about the GST among State Governments. GST ought to be the top priority in the Budget.
On indirect tax front, while there is a need for systemic reforms and forward looking pro-growth steps in general, the Budget should lay emphasis on the following specific issues, besides laying a clear-cut road map for GST implementation:
  • Simplification of tax / duty structure with few rates at least for one year till economy is back in black
  • Reduction of Excise and Service Tax rates by atleast two percent to boost production, growth in services and address inflation
  • Abolish education cesses and have separate allocation for the same
  • Remove confusion and double taxation / overlapping tax regime with simultaneous levy of VAT as well as Service Tax in certain cases
  • There should be no tax on tax and definition of sale consideration must be amended in all VAT laws. This will reduce considerable confusion and avoid litigation
  • Refunds in Excise and Service Tax should be made simpler, faster and hassle free
  • Benefits / exemption to special economic zones be rationalized
  • There should be no retrospective tax provisions which give rise to tax liability. There has to be no room for uncertainty
  • Multiple audits and investigations must be stopped. There should be single point jurisdiction for enquires, investigation, audit, adjudication etc.
  • Presently adjudication has no prescribed limits. A time limit for adjudication process to be completed must be specified. Not only this, there should be time limit for issuing orders after personal hearing is done (say 2 months). Erring officials ought to be penalized
  • The present law does not provide for transferring the cases to call book where cases are pending at higher / appellate forums but this practice is followed blatantly. Such practice only hampers the process and adversely impacts both-revenue as well as tax payer as tax liability continues without recovery and assessee is burdened with the risk of interest, in the event of demand getting confirmed.
  • Routine aggressive stand on investigations and during search may be avoided. Arrests be made only when recovery is not forthcoming even after allowing time / opportunity
  • Tax administration ought to be made more accountable and assessee friendly
  • Tax reforms must also look at lowering of compliance costs.
  • Cenvat credit mechanism may be made simpler and reduce administrative cost
  • Excise duty cuts shall boost industrial growth and consumption
  • Tax audit on the lines of income tax may be introduced in Service Tax
  • Department officers ought to be trained in law, interpretation and time management skills
  • CST rates may be lowered in the wake of GST.
So far as tax administration and reforms are concerned, it is expected that besides introducing DTC and GST at the earliest, it should aim at enhancing efficiency in tax administration, cutting down on tax collection costs, making law simpler and reducing tax litigation
- See more at: http://taxguru.in/excise-duty/expectations-budget-201415-indirect-taxes.html#sthash.KMnwnXWA.dpuf