BUDGET 2008-09: CLEAN UP DIRECT TAXES FURTHER AND TAKE LESSONS TO INDIRECT TAXES
Budget 2008-09 offers an opportunity for reduction in tax
rates due to vastly improved tax collections. The finance minister has tried to
play down expectations of a tax cut on the ground that it is to be ascertained
how much compliance has really improved. Evidence suggests a robust increase in
government direct tax collections in recent years. This fiscal too, direct tax
collections are much higher than budgeted targets. The latest quarterly data
shows that Central government income tax receipts rose by 42 per cent in
July-September 2007 over the corresponding period last year. Corporate tax
collections have increased by 34 per cent in the same period.The improvement in
tax collections has come about especially after the introduction of the Tax
Information Network (TIN). Under the TIN, information for tax deduction at
source is reconciled with actual tax payments made. This system implemented by
National Securities Depositories Limited with its all India presence and
well-designed IT systems has been able to improve compliance at a rate which
India has never seen before. Until then paper based systems saw huge leakages.
This was supplemented adequately by the Annual Information Reporting system,
under which the finance ministry tallies individual incomes with their
expenditure patterns. While part of the improvement in tax revenue is also
cyclical as the economy has witnessed high GDP growth, it clearly is not the
only story. This is clear from the data on excise. In the same quarter excise
collections fell by 0.8 per cent compared to last year.Improved compliance in direct
taxes should mean three things for the forthcoming budget. First, it offers an
opportunity to clean up direct taxes further. The most obvious step to take in
Budget 2008-09 is to get rid of the surcharge. Second, the best time for
reducing public debt is on the high of a business cycle. While the fiscal
deficit has come down, off-budget subsidies like oil bonds and food bonds have
seen a rise. This must be taken into account while looking at a trade-off
between tax cut and fiscal correction. Third, this is a time to bring in tax
collection improvements into the system of indirect taxes. The sharp
improvement in direct taxes is a lesson on what better compliance can achieve.
Hopefully, the Goods and Services Tax, which is to be introduced in April 2010,
will be implemented in the way TIN was, with technology serving the needs of
the system. This could dramatically improve compliance in indirect tax
collection too – www.Indianexpress.com