HomeBudget Budget 2018 philosophy in overall national
interest, says FM Arun Jaitley
Budget 2018 philosophy in overall national interest, says FM
Arun Jaitley
Budget 2018: In a rebuttal of the criticism of Budget
2018-19 pandering to the farm sector in a pre-election year at the expense of
the middle class and the corporate sector, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on
Friday showed how his latest budget exercise is actually designed to boost
overall economic growth with the help of all segments.
budget 2018 reactionsBudget 2018: However, capital gains
made on shares until January 31, will be “grandfathered”, Jaitley said, adding
“we have protected all investments coming in before February 1”. (Twitter)
Budget 2018: In a rebuttal of the criticism of Budget
2018-19 pandering to the farm sector in a pre-election year at the expense of
the middle class and the corporate sector, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on
Friday showed how his latest budget exercise is actually designed to boost
overall economic growth with the help of all segments. Interacting here with
corporate leaders following his Thursday presentation in Parliament of his last
full budget before the general elections due in early 2019, Jaitley said that a
stressed agriculture sector was not in India’s interest, indicating thereby that
boosting rural demand is a key in helping Indian industry currently burdened
with massive leverage, while banks struggle with their accumulated bad loans.
“To have a stressed agriculture sector and ramshackle
infrastructure does not serve the country’s interests,” Jaitley said, adding
that the farm sector had been under “a lot of stress for the last seven to
eight years.” Noting that the stress in the agriculture sector “is real”, he
said the philosophy behind Budget 2018-19 is that there remained “segments of
the economy that need large amounts of government support” although services
are doing well and manufacturing had picked up in the last two quarters. For
the Kharif agricultural output, the budget has increased the minimum support
price to one-and-a-half times the production cost, raising institutional farm
credit to Rs 11 lakh crore in 2018-19 from Rs 8.5 lakh crore.
Income tax Calculator: Calculate impact of Arun Jaitley’s
Budget 2018 on your tax liability
Fifteen per cent higher subsidies at Rs 2.64 lakh crore are
proposed on food, fertilisers and petroleum products. The budget highlight was
the Ayushman Bharat National Health Protection Scheme that aims to cover 50
crore poor people, with the scheme’s contours being worked out. Under Ayushman,
Rs five lakh cover will be provided annually to 10 crore poor and vulnerable
families in the country, while the budget provides Rs 2,000 crore for the
scheme as initial outlay. “On social welfare we started in a somewhat
disconnected way, but now some kind of social security net is beginning to take
shape in which the poor beneficiaries are also sharing some of the cost,” the
Finance Minister told the industry leaders.
Watch: Tax Takeaways From Budget 2018 For The Common Man
Asked about the small outlay on the health scheme, he said
more funds would be made available going ahead. At the post-Budget briefing on
Thursday, he had said that as the country progressed economically, setting up a
social security net had become essential. On corporate tax, Jaitley pointed to
the proposed reduction to 25 per cent from the coming fiscal for companies
which had a turnover up to Rs 250 crore during 2016-17. Declaring that the
ceiling had been raised to go with the new definition of SMEs, he said it would
benefit the entire class of micro, small and medium enterprises which accounts
for almost 99 per cent of the companies filing their tax returns.
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The revenue the exchequer will forgo during the coming
financial year on account of this relaxation has been estimated at Rs 7,000
crore. On the other hand, to mobilise resources required for schemes, the long
term capital gains tax has been reintroduced. Budget 2018-19 on Thursday
proposed to tax long-term capital gains on equities exceeding Rs 1 lakh at 10
per cent, which is expected to bring in a revenue of Rs 20,000 crore. However,
capital gains made on shares until January 31, will be “grandfathered”, Jaitley
said, adding “we have protected all investments coming in before February 1”.
Watch: Budget 2018: 10 New Facts On The Indian Economy
Regarding the customs duty imposed, he said that it had been
restricted to a few sectors to block cheap imports from destroying domestic
industry. The budget hiked customs duty on mobile phones to 20 per cent from 15
per cent — a move that will force foreign players to pass on the burden to
consumers. Presenting the budget on Thursday, Jaitley also made a significant
announcement of fiscal slippage with implications for pushing inflation,
revising upwards the government’s fiscal deficit target for 2017-18 to 3.5 per
cent of the GDP, or the equivalent of Rs 5.95 lakh crore. The higher target
came in place of the 3.2 per cent – or Rs 5.46 lakh crore – for the current
fiscal announced earlier.
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