Rohit Sinha, 

 

diamonds big tax breaks or exemptions

Highlights

* India gave away tax breaks or exemptions worth Rs 533,582 crore ($97 billion) or nearly 67% of tax collections in 2011-12

* While small companies had an effective tax rate of 26.26%,  large companies enjoyed an effective tax rate of 21.67%

* Revenue foregone under excise duty was greater than the actual collections in 2011-12

 

Did you know that India gave away tax breaks or exemptions worth Rs 533,582 crore ($97 billion) or nearly 67% of tax collections in 2011-12.

That’s according to the Statement of Revenue Foregone, a part of the Union Budget documents presented for the first time in the 2006-07 Union Budget, and a regular practice ever since.

This is not to say all such breaks are good or bad, merely to highlight what the specifics are and for those who want to ask; what specifically can we afford and not ?

Revenue foregone also tells you about the Government’s policy stance and how concessions/relaxations/exemptions are conferred upon ‘preferred’ tax payers. Such tax breaks could also be termed hidden subsidies, since they could be in the form of exemptions, special tax rates, deductions on taxable income, rebates and tax deferment or tax credits.

Let us look at the latest data from the Union Budget 2013-14.

Figure 1 (a)

aggregate tax collected and revenue forgone in 2011-12<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />

Figure 1 (b)

break up of aggregate tax collected and revenue forgone in 2011-12

Rs 533,582 crore of revenue foregone is not a comforting statistic when the provisional fiscal deficit for 2011-12 is Rs 509,000 crore. Or, 67.7% of total tax collection is certainly big, considering that India’s tax base has not really grown. At 15.5%, India has one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios. In 2011-12, the tax-GDP ratio stood at 5.5% for direct taxes and 4.4% for indirect taxes.

Let us now look at each category of revenue foregone:  the components under the smallest one, Personal Income Tax, include exemptions given on account of investments made by tax payers in infrastructure bonds, donations to charitable trusts and institutions, contributions to political parties and higher exemption limit for women and senior citizens. This would also include a tax credit of Rs 2,000 to every person who had a total income up to Rs 5 lakh proposed in the latest budget.

The latest released figures show that the effective Corporate Tax rate (Effective tax rate in case of companies is the ratio of total taxes paid including surcharge and education cess but excluding Dividend Distribution Tax to the total profit before taxes [PBT]declined in reverse proportion to total profits.

So, the smallest companies (with PBT of up to Rs 1 crore) had an effective tax rate of 26.26%, while the largest companies (PBT greater than Rs 500 crore) enjoyed an effective tax rate of 21.67%.

Interestingly, the Statement of Revenue Foregone document observes that the ratio of total income to PBT is much higher (85.79%) for companies with PBT of up to Rs 1 crore than that for the total sample (70.60%). This indicates lesser deviance from PBT in case of relatively small companies as compared to larger companies owing to higher tax concessions being availed by the latter.

Table 1

effective tax rates for companies across range of profits

(Source: Union Budget 2013-14)

Moreover, the tax liability across companies is highly asymmetric. For instance, in FY 2011-12, 48,527 companies, with average effective tax rate greater than the statutory rate, accounted for 10.88% of total profit before taxes and 19.40% of the total taxes paid. While 263,315 companies accounting for 37.42% profit before taxes and 15.44% of total taxes paid had an average effective tax rate of up to 20%.

Major tax expenditures on corporate tax payers in terms of revenue foregone during the year 2011-12 include on account of accelerated depreciation, deduction/weighted deduction for expenditure on scientific research/housing projects/cold chain facility, deduction of export profits of units located in SEZs, deduction of profits of undertakings set-up in regions such as North-East, Sikkim, Himachal and Uttaranchal etc.

What about indirect taxes including excise and custom duty? Interestingly, revenue foregone under excise duty is greater than the actual collections (see Table 1). Considering such large exemptions are granted on inland taxes, the document does not give detailed information on its components. It only disassociates between ‘area-based exemptions’ (applicable in the North Eastern states, Uttaranchal, Himachal Pradesh, J&K and Kutch district of Gujarat) and ‘others’. The area-based exemptions account 9% of the total excise duty exemptions for 2011-12.

The largest component of revenue foregone is custom duty exemptions, i.e. exemptions on duty charged on imports. The largest share of customs duty foregone (Rs 65,975 crore or 23%) in 2011-12, is for the commodity group of diamonds and gold.

Figure 2

Contribution of Top 5 Commodity Groups Contributing To Custom Duty foregone 2011-12

This is surprising, especially in the case of gold. There was a surge in gold imports in 2011-12 – from 933 tonne in 2010-11 to 1,038 tonne in 2011-12; and the government attempted a mid-course correction to control imports. In January 2012, the import duty on gold was changed to 2% of value from the flat duty rate of Rs 300 per 10 gm.

In the current and preceding years (2012-13 and 2013-14), the government has been trying everything to limit gold imports to control the current account deficit (CAD): yet this commodity has one of the largest share in terms of exemption given. In 2012-13, the estimated amount of custom duty foregone for diamond and gold would be Rs 61,035 crore or 20.5% of the total revenue foregone.

(Rohit Sinha is associated with the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation)

Read more- http://www.indiaspend.com/investigations/gold-diamonds-indias-biggest-tax-beneficiaries-12020