Industry And Cluster | News & Insights

India Inc seeks steps to stimulate consumption, revive investment.

Published: January 28, 2020
Author: TEXTILE VALUE CHAIN

Industry body sought policy stability for restoring investor confidence in sectors like retail, mining & auto.

India Inc has made a strong pitch for converging corporate tax rate to 15% over three years, ease of doing business and improving regulatory environment to safeguard investment as part of its budget wish list.

At a pre-budget meeting with finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman Thursday, industry captains sought measures to stimulate consumption, revive private investment and boost growth. “I made some suggestions around mergers and acquisitions and demergers, about NCLT processes and about certain sections of income tax that are coming in the way of M&A or are slowing them down,” Bharti Enterprises chairman Sunil Mittal told reporters after the meeting.

“The idea is to create more freedom for the industry for them to perform. What we look forward to in this budget is that it unleashes the energy of the Indian entrepreneurs to do more.”

Industry body CII sought policy stability for restoring investor confidence in sectors like retail, mining, auto & renewable energy.

CII president Vikram Kirloskar talked of applicability of redu-ced corporate tax rate of 22% for existing firms in limited liability partnerships and partnership firms. “This will in turn offer relief to the MSME sector,” he said.

FICCI president Sandip Somany suggested that income tax for those earning over `20 lakh should be halved to boost consumption. “Banks need to lower interest rates and pass on rate reduction announced by RBI.” The government has set up a Rs 25,000-crore fund to support under-development projects in the real estate sector.

The industry seeks more relief for homebuyers to drive growth. “The government should allow homebuyers to get a family tax deduction on home loans,” said Ravi Raheja, group president of K Raheja Group.

The government should relook at the import duty structure to rationalise taxation, CII suggested, pointing out that export competitiveness needed equal costs of higher logistics and electricity and lifting of cross-subsidisation.

“Import duties should be structured in such a manner that they are the highest for final goods, lower for intermediate goods and lowest for raw material, which will strengthen Make in India,” it said.

GMR Group business chairman BVN Rao, Ashok Leyland MD Vipin Sondhi, RP-Sanjiv Goenka Group chairman Sanjiv Goenka, Wipro’s global CFO Jatin Dalal, Patanjali Ayurved chairman Acharya Balkrishan and ASSOCHAM president Balkrishan Goenka were among the representatives of Corporate India at Friday’s meeting.

India Inc seeks a single corporate tax rate of 15% over three years.

Corporate India has pitched for “uniformity” in the corporate tax rate, stating that a rate of 22 per cent for existing firms and 15 per cent for new manufacturing firms creates “inequality”.

All corporate tax rates in the country should be converged to 15 per cent — with no exemptions and incentives — over three years from April 1, 2023, Confederation of Indian Industry President Vikram Kirloskar suggested to Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman at the pre-Budget meeting convened with prominent industrialists here.

Kirloskar highlighted that convergence of the corporate tax rate (to 15 per cent) will lead to greater clarity and prevent any disputes. This will also assure investors on the glide path of the corporate tax regime, he said.

“In general, we would suggest that the principle should be to have lower tax rates and fewer exemptions,” Kirloskar said.

The CII came up with 10 points to improve ease of doing business, strengthen the role of the State, enhance export competitiveness, and revive private investment and growth.

These include decriminalising various laws and procedures as is being done for the Companies Act, stating that any such move would address the trust deficit.

CII also made a case for extending the reduced corporate tax rate of 22 per cent to Limited Liability Partnerships and partnership firms.

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