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No plans to revise fiscal deficit target at present: Nirmala Sitharaman

In the biggest reduction in 28 years, the government on Friday slashed corporate tax by almost 10 percentage points as it looked to pull the economy out of a six-year low growth and a 45-year high unemployment rate by reviving private investments with a Rs 1.45-lakh crore tax break.

Edited by: India TV Business Desk New Delhi Published : Sep 23, 2019 7:14 IST, Updated : Sep 23, 2019 7:27 IST
Nirmala Sitharaman
Image Source : PTI

No plans to revise fiscal deficit target at this time: Sitharaman

There are no plans to revise the fiscal deficit target for the current fiscal at the moment, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Sunday, adding a decision in this regard will be taken before the annual Budget. Experts are of the view that India's fiscal deficit will widen as a result of the corporate tax reduction by the government.

When asked if the government will consider revising the fiscal deficit target, Sitharaman said these are "decisions taken near the Budget".

In the biggest reduction in 28 years, the government on Friday slashed corporate tax by almost 10 percentage points as it looked to pull the economy out of a six-year low growth and a 45-year high unemployment rate by reviving private investments with a Rs 1.45-lakh crore tax break.

Base corporate tax for existing companies was reduced to 22 per cent from the current 30 per cent; and for new manufacturing firms, incorporated after October 1, 2019 and starting operations before March 31, 2023, to 15 per cent from the current 25 per cent.

On raising the borrowing target for the second half of the current fiscal, the finance minister said, it will be decided in the next few days.

"Not touching any of the given targets now. When the meeting for revised estimates takes place, we will look at it," Sitharaman said.

According to global rating agency Moody's, the reduction in corporate income tax revenue – even when balanced against the windfall from the recent transfer of central bank surplus reserves, equivalent to around 0.3 per cent of GDP in the current fiscal year – further narrows fiscal room for manoeuvre.

However, it described the rate reduction as credit positive for companies because it will enable them to generate higher post-tax incomes.

Also Read | Petrol price soars by Rs 0.29 in Delhi

Also Read | SBI to roll out co-lending model with 4-5 NBFCs

Watch: Sitharaman announces new taxation laws

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