Budget reaches out to farmers, unorganized labour

Budget reaches out to farmers, unorganized labour
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Highlights

* Full rebate up to Rs 5 lakh annual income after all deductions

* Within 2 years, tax assessment will be done electronically

* IT returns processing in just 24 hours

* Minimum 14% revenue of GST to states by Central government

* Custom duty abolished from 36 Capital Goods

* Recommendations to GST Council for reducing GST rates for home buyers

* Standard deduction increased from Rs 40,000 to Rs 50,000

* Exemption on tax on second self-occupied house

* Ceiling Limit of TDS u/s 194A increased from Rs 10,000 to Rs 40,000 for women

* Ceiling Limit of TDS u/s 194I increased from Rs 180,000 to Rs 240,000

* Capital tax Benefit u/s 54 increased from investment in one residential house to two residential houses.

nBenefit u/s 80IB increased to one more year i.e. 2020

* Benefit given to unsold inventory increased from one year to two years.

Other Areas

1. Monthly pension of Rs 3,000 per month for workers in unorganized sector who earn up to Rs 15,000 per month.

2. State share increased to 42%

3. PCA restriction abolished from 3 major banks

4. 2 lakh seats will increase for the reservation of 10%

5. Rs 60,000 crore for MGNREGA

6. Rs 1.7 lakh crore to ensure food for all

7. 22nd AIIMS to open in Haryana

8. Approval has to be given to PM Kisan Yojana

9. Rs 6,000 per annum to be given to every farmer having up to 2 hectare land. Applicable from September 2018. Amount will be transferred in 3 installments

10. National ‘kamdhenu ayog’ for cows. Rs 750 crore for National Gokul Mission

11. 2% interest subvention for farmers pursuing animal husbandry. Creation of separate department for fisheries.

12. 2% interest subvention for farmers affected by natural calamities and additional 3% interest subvention for timely payment.

13. Free gratuity limit increased to Rs 20 lakh from Rs 10 lakh

14. Bonus will be applicable for workers earning Rs 21,000 monthly

15. Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Mandhan will provide assured monthly pension of Rs 3,000 with contribution of Rs 100 per month for workers in unorganized sector after 60 years of age.

16. Our government delivered 6 crore free LPG connections under Ujjawala scheme

17. 2% interest relief for MSME GST registered person

18. 26 weeks of Maternity Leave to empower the women

19. More than Rs 3 lakh crore for defence

20. One lakh digital villages in next 5 years

21. Single window for approval of Indian filmmakers.

NEW DELHI: Finance Minister Piyush Goyal on Friday showered tax sops for the middle class and salaried taxpayers including zero tax liability for those with income is up to Rs 5 lakh and announced an annual income support of Rs 6,000 for small farmers and contributory pension for labourers in the demonetization-hit unorganized sector.

Taking the place of an ailing Arun Jaitley, in his 100-minute speech, Goyal also announced raising the Standard Deduction for the salaried class and pensioners from Rs 40,000 to Rs 50,000 and proposed exemption from tax on notional rent on second self-occupied home. This would help families maintaining homes at two locations due to their jobs.

In a big relief for the middle-income group, he increased the rebate under Section 87A of the Income Tax Act from Rs 2,500 to Rs 12,500 - the equivalent of 5 per cent tax on Rs 2.5 lakh to Rs 5 lakh slab - and also raised the eligibility criterion for claiming the rebate to Rs 5 lakh from Rs 3.5 lakh earlier. This effectively reduces the tax liability of those with net taxable income up to Rs 5 lakh to nil.

However, tax liability for those with net income above Rs 5 lakh would still start from Rs 2.5 lakh as earlier. The Interim Budget neither changed the existing tax rates or the slabs.

The tax giveaways involve a revenue sacrifice of Rs 23,100 crore a year to benefit more than three crore salary earners and pensioners - Rs 18,400 crore on account of Rs 12,500 tax rebate and other changes and Rs 4,700 crore on account of raising the standard deduction.

In the wake of the BJP’s defeat in the Hindi heartland states in December on perceived stress in agriculture and informal sectors, the Budget came out with a direct income support of Rs 6,000 per annum for small farmers with land-holding size up to two hectares which would be transferred directly into their bank accounts.

The scheme would be funded completely by the Central government and would directly benefit 12 crore farmer families, he said to the cheers of the ruling benches.

Acknowledging reduced returns for farmers due to falling food prices in the international market and declining inflation, Goyal said the scheme would be implemented from December 1 last year for which Rs 20,000 crore has been allocated in the revised estimates for the current fiscal and Rs 75,000 crore in the Interim Budget for the whole of next fiscal.

For the demo-hit unorganized sector, Goyal announced a contributory pension scheme providing for Rs 3,000 per month on attaining 60 year that will benefit 10 crore workers in the unorganized sector.

Those who enter the scheme at 18 years will have to pay a monthly premium of Rs 55 while those who enter at 29 years will have to pay Rs 100 per month till they reach 60. The government will contribute a matching share in the pension account of workers.

This scheme, he said, will be implemented from the current year and a sum of Rs 500 crore has been allocated and more will be given if needed.

In a big relief to pensioners and senior citizens, he also raised the threshold for Tax Deduction at Source (TDS) on interest received on bank deposits from Rs 10,000 to Rs 40,000, and TDS on rent from Rs 180,000 to Rs 240,000.

“Once you account deductions under Section 80(C), middle-class tax payers with gross income up to Rs 6.5 lakh will have no need to pay income tax,” he said amidst prolonged thumping of desks by the ruling NDA members who kept shouting “Modi, Modi, Modi”. The Prime Minister was himself seen thumping the desks every time Goyal made fresh announcements.

Taken along with Standard Deduction and other sops like interest paid on home loans, education loans, contribution to National Pension Scheme, medical insurance premium and medical expenses on senior citizens, the effective exemption would go up further.

He said while the changes in the tax structure would be made in the regular Budget, people needed a certainty in their minds in the beginning of the year about what taxes they would have to pay and went on to announce the tax sops in the Part B of his speech.

The budget also stepped up defence allocation which he said will be crossing Rs 3 lakh crore for the first time in 2019-20. “If necessary, additional funds would be provided for securing our borders and to maintain preparedness of the highest order.”

Part of the funding for the agriculture and unorganized sector schemes may come from the Rs 20,000 hike in the RBI and PSU dividends from Rs 54,000 crore in 2018-19.

Turning to macro finance in the budget, Goyal revised the fiscal deficit target for 2019-20 at 3.4 per cent of the GDP, up by 0.1 per cent targeted this year.

“We would have maintained fiscal deficit at 3.3 per cent for 2018-19 and taken further steps to consolidate fiscal deficit in 2019-20. However, considering the need for income support to farmers, we have provided Rs 20,000 crore in the revised estimate of the current fiscal and Rs 75,000 crore in the budget estimates of 2019-20.

“If we exclude this, the fiscal deficit would have been less than 3.3 per cent for 2018-19 and less than 3.1 per cent for 2019-20.”

The Interim Budget pegged the total expenditure for 2019-20 at Rs 27,84,200 crore, up from Rs 24,57,235 crore in the revised estimates of the current fiscal, which is a rise of approximately 13.3 per cent.

At the outset, Goyal said the paralysis of the past had been broken and India solidly put back on track and marching towards growth and prosperity.

The government had succeeded in breaking the back of the ‘back breaking’ inflation which stood at 2.19 per cent in December. “If we had not controlled inflation, our families would have been spending around 35 to 40 per cent more today on basic necessities.”

Critics of the budget said the exercise was one of optics and rhetoric. They raised questions like where the money would come for funding the schemes to benefit farmers and labour in the unorganized sector.

The government may bank on the gross borrowing that has been estimated at over Rs 7 lakh crore but on the direct taxes front contrary to claims of buyoancy and compliance ramping up, there is a deficit.

Government sources indicated that all eyes would now be on RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, who was appointed recently, to come to the aid of the government to come out with an interest rate cut on the back of a benign inflation. (IANS)

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