TAX BREAKS: PUNJAB COMES UNDER FIRE
States, which
enjoy area-based tax exemption on new investments, have hit back at the plans
of the Punjab government to seek legal remedy
to check migration of investments from the state to the tax-free states. Calling
the central package a “well deserved” one, the industry and government
representatives of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand felt that it is in tune with the constitutional
rights of the central government. PC Sarma, principal
secretary (industries), Uttarakhand, said the central
government has always provided assistance to the backward states. “Punjab and Haryana have been
complaining this for some time now. They are industrially developed states as
compared to us. To correct this anomaly, the central government in its wisdom
decided to offer this special package. It is a well deserved package,” Sarma said. The feeling was shared by industrialists who
have set shop in these states also. According to them, the combined investment
proposals that have reached Himachal, Uttarakhand and Jammu
and Kashmir over the last four years is about Rs 60,000 crore. As compared to
that, investment proposals reaching non-exempt states are much higher even
today, they say. “Himachal has received investment
proposals worth Rs 27,000 crore
in the last four years. This is very less when compared to Punjab’s
claim that it has attracted 1,50,000 crore worth investment proposals in just one year,” said Rajinder Guleria, chairman (Himachal Chapter), Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Guleria added that none of the big companies like Dr
Reddy’s, Hindustan Lever, Unichem or Torrent have
closed their existing units in other states. “There is no question of
migration. Further, if the total investments are divided between the states
that claim revenue losses, one would realise that no
major investment shift has taken place,” he explains. Punjab
is not alone in voicing protest against the central policy. Andhra Pradesh, the
first state to voice its reservation on the Centre’s
area based tax-exemption policy, has reiterated its request for extension of
the sops to other backward regions in the country, including Andhra, and also urge the Centre to include its request in the ensuing
Budget. “In a democratic set-up, it is difficult to withdraw such incentives
once they are given, but they can be extended to other backward regions in the
country as industrialisation is the fastest growth
engine to economic development,” DV Somayajulu,
economic adviser to the Andhra Pradesh government, said. Andhra Pradesh had in
the past requested the prime minister to extend the same industrial incentive
package to its backward districts, Somayajulu said. According
to him, certain regions in Rayalaseema, north coastal
Andhra and Telangana with their larger populations
and lower per capita incomes than states like Uttarakhand
continue to be more backward and deserve the same treatment. The Punjab government has decided to oppose the Centre’s 2003 area-based tax exemption scheme in the
Supreme Court on the grounds that the policy had resulted in significant
revenue erosion and job losses for it. Meanwhile, the ruling Siromani Akali Dal (SAD)is planning a rally of about 100,000 persons in
Delhi on February 26 to protest against the “step-motherly” attitude of the
central government towards industrial growth in Punjab. As reported, Punjab is the first state to declare its intention to
oppose the central tax exemption scheme for hill states, both politically as
well as legally. – www.business-standard.com