The budget aims to transform, energize, and clean India. It focuses on supporting farmers, rural development, jobs, housing, and healthcare. While some measures support sectors like exports, manufacturing, and tourism, the budget focuses on fiscal discipline and limiting the deficit. Direct taxes see changes mainly to individual and corporate taxation, while indirect taxes will be subsumed under GST. The economy is projected to recover from demonetization impacts, with GDP growth of 6.75-7.5% expected in 2017-18.
The document provides an overview of the key highlights from the Indian Union Budget for 2017-18. It summarizes the major allocations and policy initiatives across 10 sectors - Farmers; rural population; energizing youth; poor and underprivileged; infrastructure; financial sector; digital economy; public service; prudent fiscal management; and tax administration. Some of the major initiatives include increased funding for rural development programs, infrastructure development, healthcare, education and skills training to support farmers, rural communities, youth and the underprivileged.
Latest Key Features of Budget 2017-2018 on each topics discussed in Union Bud...Youth Apps
Latest Key Features of Budget 2017-2018 on each topics discussed in Union Budget 2017.
INTRODUCTION
CHALLENGES IN 2017-18
DEMONITISATION
ROADMAP & PRIORITIES
FARMERS
RURAL POPULATION
YOUTH
INFRASTRUCTURE
FINANCIAL SECTOR
DIGITAL ECONOMY
PUBLIC SERVICE
PRUDENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT
PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND REAL ESTATE SECTOR
PROMOTING DIGITAL ECONOMY
EASE OF DOING BUSINESS
GOODS AND SERVICES TAX
RAPID (Revenue, Accountability, Probity, Information and Digitisation)
The Union Budget 2017-18 aims to improve the quality of growth and life of citizens. Key priorities include farmers, rural development, skills development for youth, and welfare of the poor. Infrastructure development remains a focus. Fiscal deficit is targeted at 3.2% of GDP for 2017-18. Prudent fiscal management aims to achieve fiscal targets while increasing capital expenditures. The budget emphasizes use of digital technology and improving tax administration.
The Union Budget for 2017-18 was presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on February 1st, 2017. This was the fourth budget under the Narendra Modi government. Key highlights included increased allocation for welfare of women and children to Rs. 1,84,632 crore, tax proposals, a focus on rural populations, infrastructure and railways, and support for agriculture and vulnerable groups.
The budget document discusses key changes made in the Union Budget 2017 presented by the Finance Minister, including:
- The budget date was advanced to February 1 to allow ministries time to implement activities from April 1.
- The railway budget was merged with the general budget, discontinuing a colonial-era practice.
- Classification of expenditures as plan and non-plan was removed, with allocation divided into capital and revenue.
- Measures were introduced to curb black money while focusing on rural growth and digitizing the economy. Tax relief was provided for individuals and small companies.
The budget aims to transform, energize, and clean India with a focus on long-term vision.
The document summarizes key aspects of India's 2017-18 Union Budget. It outlines the agenda for the year, which focuses on transforming governance, energizing various sections of society, and cleaning the country from issues like corruption. It also summarizes major policy announcements, including liberalizing FDI rules and listing railway PSEs, as well as key proposals for direct taxes like income tax rates and corporate tax rates, and indirect taxes including changes to customs and excise duty tariffs.
The document provides a high-level summary of key aspects of the 2017-2018 budget of India. It allocates ₹21.47 lakh crores with focus on farmers, rural population, youth, poor and underprivileged, and sectors like railways, infrastructure, financial, and digital. It aims to boost agriculture with higher credit limits, expand crop insurance and markets. It also focuses on rural employment, healthcare, education, housing, and transportation infrastructure development through initiatives like MGNREGA, Swachh Bharat, and Smart Cities. Fiscal deficit is targeted at 3.2% of GDP with emphasis on transparency, ease of doing business and a simplified income tax structure.
The document provides an overview of the key highlights from the Indian Union Budget for 2017-18. It summarizes the major allocations and policy initiatives across 10 sectors - Farmers; rural population; energizing youth; poor and underprivileged; infrastructure; financial sector; digital economy; public service; prudent fiscal management; and tax administration. Some of the major initiatives include increased funding for rural development programs, infrastructure development, healthcare, education and skills training to support farmers, rural communities, youth and the underprivileged.
Latest Key Features of Budget 2017-2018 on each topics discussed in Union Bud...Youth Apps
Latest Key Features of Budget 2017-2018 on each topics discussed in Union Budget 2017.
INTRODUCTION
CHALLENGES IN 2017-18
DEMONITISATION
ROADMAP & PRIORITIES
FARMERS
RURAL POPULATION
YOUTH
INFRASTRUCTURE
FINANCIAL SECTOR
DIGITAL ECONOMY
PUBLIC SERVICE
PRUDENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT
PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND REAL ESTATE SECTOR
PROMOTING DIGITAL ECONOMY
EASE OF DOING BUSINESS
GOODS AND SERVICES TAX
RAPID (Revenue, Accountability, Probity, Information and Digitisation)
The Union Budget 2017-18 aims to improve the quality of growth and life of citizens. Key priorities include farmers, rural development, skills development for youth, and welfare of the poor. Infrastructure development remains a focus. Fiscal deficit is targeted at 3.2% of GDP for 2017-18. Prudent fiscal management aims to achieve fiscal targets while increasing capital expenditures. The budget emphasizes use of digital technology and improving tax administration.
The Union Budget for 2017-18 was presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on February 1st, 2017. This was the fourth budget under the Narendra Modi government. Key highlights included increased allocation for welfare of women and children to Rs. 1,84,632 crore, tax proposals, a focus on rural populations, infrastructure and railways, and support for agriculture and vulnerable groups.
The budget document discusses key changes made in the Union Budget 2017 presented by the Finance Minister, including:
- The budget date was advanced to February 1 to allow ministries time to implement activities from April 1.
- The railway budget was merged with the general budget, discontinuing a colonial-era practice.
- Classification of expenditures as plan and non-plan was removed, with allocation divided into capital and revenue.
- Measures were introduced to curb black money while focusing on rural growth and digitizing the economy. Tax relief was provided for individuals and small companies.
The budget aims to transform, energize, and clean India with a focus on long-term vision.
The document summarizes key aspects of India's 2017-18 Union Budget. It outlines the agenda for the year, which focuses on transforming governance, energizing various sections of society, and cleaning the country from issues like corruption. It also summarizes major policy announcements, including liberalizing FDI rules and listing railway PSEs, as well as key proposals for direct taxes like income tax rates and corporate tax rates, and indirect taxes including changes to customs and excise duty tariffs.
The document provides a high-level summary of key aspects of the 2017-2018 budget of India. It allocates ₹21.47 lakh crores with focus on farmers, rural population, youth, poor and underprivileged, and sectors like railways, infrastructure, financial, and digital. It aims to boost agriculture with higher credit limits, expand crop insurance and markets. It also focuses on rural employment, healthcare, education, housing, and transportation infrastructure development through initiatives like MGNREGA, Swachh Bharat, and Smart Cities. Fiscal deficit is targeted at 3.2% of GDP with emphasis on transparency, ease of doing business and a simplified income tax structure.
This presentation has been prepared to give a glimpse of Union Budget 2017-18. It will come handy for management students who have Finance as one of their subjects.
This slide deck includes the highlights of the recent Union Budget of India for the financial year 2017-18 announced by Mr Arun Jaitley (Finance Minister) on 2nd Feb 2017.
The document summarizes key points from the 2017-18 Union Budget of India presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. The budget focused on 10 themes: farmers, rural population, youth, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, digital economy, fiscal management, tax proposals, and political party funding. Key allocations and policy changes are outlined for agriculture, rural development, education, healthcare, infrastructure, energy, taxation, and other sectors. The budget was positively received in stock markets but rail stocks fell due to proposed rail allocation. Certain items like cigarettes and LED components will be costlier while online rail tickets and LNG will be cheaper after the budget.
The document summarizes key points from the Indian government's 2017-18 budget. It outlines tax proposals including reduced personal income tax rates and corporate tax cuts for small businesses. It also allocates funds for healthcare, including expanding insurance coverage and setting up new medical colleges. On education, it proposes expanding vocational training programs. For rural development, it aims to provide homes, irrigation, electricity and increase credit for farmers. It also sets targets for expanding digital infrastructure and rail network improvements.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley presented the Union Budget for 2016-17 and reaffirmed that the economy is on the right track. The budget is aimed at strengthening India's firewalls by ensuring macroeconomic stability and prudent fiscal management; driving growth through domestic demand; and economic reforms and policy initiatives to change lives for the better. With measured focus on social sector reforms and recapitalising India's banking system, this Budget has an overarching focus on improving agriculture, and scaling infrastructure, all of which bode well for the country. The government is now planning to rationalise and channel subsidies to the poor by increasing the burden on the rich, and by increasing spending on public welfare through its own kitty.
Mr. Jaitley said the Union Budget is aimed at improving rural infrastructure and increasing rural income, as the biggest challenge to the economy is agrarian distress. Applauding the budget presented by the Finance Minister, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the Budget is pro-village, pro-poor and pro–farmers, and is focused on bringing about qualitative changes in the country through a slew of time-bound programmes.
The attached note captures key highlights and summarises major announcements in the Budget.
Please reach out to us should you wish to understand more about the Union Budget and its impact on your business
The document is a summary of the key announcements made in the Indian Union Budget for 2018-19 presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. Some of the key highlights include:
- Increased focus on agriculture and rural economy through initiatives like Operation Green, e-NAM, and increasing MSP for crops.
- Investments in education through the new RISE initiative and setting up more medical colleges and Ekalavya schools.
- Allocations for railways infrastructure projects, electrification, dedicated freight corridors and procurement of trains and locomotives.
- Tax relief for small businesses and salaried individuals through standard deduction and lower tax rates.
- Increased investments in infrastructure like roads, airports,
The document summarizes key aspects of the India Budget 2016, including:
1) It focuses on 9 pillars to transform India including agriculture, rural employment, social sectors, infrastructure, financial reforms, and ease of doing business.
2) Key allocations include Rs. 36,000 crores for agriculture and farmer welfare, Rs. 38,500 crores for MGNREGS, and Rs. 2,21,246 crores for infrastructure development.
3) Reforms aim to boost startups, manufacturing, and increase FDI in various sectors such as insurance and pension funds.
Edelman India Analysis
Standing in for Mr Arun Jaitley, Finance Minister (FM), Piyush Goyal presented the Union Budget of India earlier today. Highlighting achievements of various Government schemes, Mr Goyal stated that the Government led by Prime Minister Modi has been the most decisive and transformational in executing structural reforms.
Focused on rural and inclusive development over the next 5-10 years, the Budget included significant announcements ahead of the General Elections while also outlining ten dimensions of the Government’s Vision for India’s development by 2030. The launch of, “Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN),” which aims to supplement rural income, captured the limelight of this year’s budget. The middle class has also benefited with higher gratuity, broadening of the tax-exempt bracket and waivers on income tax on notional rent. A mega pension scheme for workers in the unorganised sector was also announced along with health coverage under the ‘Ayushman Bharat’ scheme.
The Government has budgeted for overall expenditure of INR 27.8 trillion in 2019-20, an increase of 13% over the previous year’s estimates, while targeting a fiscal deficit of 3.4% in 2019-20 and 3% in 2020-21.
A budget is a quantitative expression of a financial plan, we all know that but, not everyone understands the whole of Budget. For this reason alone, the budget views are presented in a PPT format for your reference.
A presentation by CA Manish Hingar
The document summarizes the key highlights from the Union Budget for 2018-19, including a focus on improving rural healthcare and education through programs like a health insurance program covering 50 crore people and investments in building more schools. It also outlines initiatives to boost infrastructure development, support MSMEs, and continue fiscal consolidation. Overall the budget aims to enhance welfare programs while also promoting growth through various reforms and policy measures.
The key direct tax proposals include increasing the surcharge on individuals earning over Rs. 1 crore to 15%, taxing dividend income over Rs. 10 lakhs at 10%, and introducing an equalization levy of 6% on non-resident companies for digital transactions. Notable corporate tax proposals include a concessional 10% tax rate for income from patents developed in India, 100% deduction of profits for 3 years for eligible startups, and phasing out of certain tax exemptions by 2020. The budget also introduced an income declaration scheme and a direct tax dispute resolution scheme.
The budget document outlines key details of the 2017-18 Indian union budget. Some highlights include a fiscal deficit target of 3.2% of GDP, total borrowing estimated at Rs. 546332 crore, a reduction of the corporate tax rate for MSMEs to 25%, and a reduction of the tax rate on income up to Rs. 5 lakh to 5%. It also notes a 25.4% increase in capital expenditure from the previous year.
The 2013-14 Union Budget of India was presented by Finance Minister P. Chidambaram on February 28, 2013. Key aspects included allocating Rs. 37,330 crore to health sector, Rs. 65,867 crore to education, Rs. 27,049 crore to agriculture, and Rs. 1,000 crore for a women's bank and Nirbhaya Fund for women's empowerment. The budget aimed to boost growth while reducing the deficit and increasing rural spending power. However, taxes for high income earners were raised and the Sensex fell due to the budget.
The document provides details about the Union Budget of India for 2009-2010. It summarizes the key aspects of the budget including total estimated expenditures of Rs. 10.2 trillion and estimated revenues of Rs. 6.1 trillion. It outlines spending increases for sectors like rural development, education, health, and infrastructure development. The economic survey highlights India's GDP growth target of 7.5% for 2009-2010 with challenges from the global slowdown and inflation addressed through fiscal policy changes.
The budget document outlines several major reforms and policy initiatives in the 2017-18 Indian budget. It includes advancing the date of budget presentation, merging the railway budget with the main budget, and abolishing the distinction between plan and non-plan expenditure. It also outlines changes to direct and indirect taxation rates, as well as allocations for infrastructure development, rural development, healthcare, education, skill development, agriculture and banking sector reforms.
The budget proposal is divided into 10 themes: farmers, rural population, youth, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, digital economy, public services, fiscal management, and tax administration. Key points include increased farmer credit, rural development programs, skill training for youth, healthcare initiatives, infrastructure spending on railways and roads, financial reforms, digital payment promotion, and tax reforms including lowering personal income tax rates. The budget aims to boost rural spending and contains major reforms like merging the railway budget.
The budget allocates funds across several key sectors of the Indian economy. It aims to double farmer incomes by 2022 by allocating Rs. 35,984 crore for agriculture and providing irrigation for 28.5 lakh hectares at a cost of Rs. 17,000 crore. It also increases allocations for rural development, social sectors like education and healthcare, and infrastructure development. While some taxes are increased on tobacco, luxury goods, and diesel vehicles, individual taxpayers below Rs. 5 lakh annual income and senior citizens receiving medical insurance of Rs. 130,000 will receive relief.
The 2018-19 Union Budget focused on 6 key themes: farmers, rural population, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, and tax proposals. It allocated funds to various agriculture, rural development, and healthcare initiatives. It also aimed to boost infrastructure development through increased funding for highways, railways, and metro networks. Additionally, the budget proposed reforms to encourage investment and ease of business through changes to FDI policy, Mudra loans, and SEBI norms. The overall objectives were to focus on health, develop MSMEs, boost agriculture, prioritize rural development and education.
The Union Budget 2017 document summarizes key changes announced in the Indian Union Budget of 2017 and their implications. Some of the major changes include reductions in income tax rates for individual income between 2.5 to 5 lakhs, a reduction in the income tax rebate amount, restrictions on cash transactions over 300,000 rupees, a 10% income tax surcharge for incomes between 50 to 100 lakhs, and reductions in the permissible amount for cash donations from 10,000 to 2,000 rupees. The budget also included exempting long term capital gains from equity investments from tax if securities transaction tax was paid, penalties for delayed income tax filings, and changes to long term capital gains holding periods and the
The document summarizes the key aspects of the Union Budget 2020-21 presented by the Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, including structural reforms focused on governance, financial sector, agriculture, and infrastructure development, as well as expenditure estimates and tax proposals aimed at boosting the Indian economy and achieving the government's vision of an aspirational India. The budget aims to balance growth promotion with fiscal discipline through measured stimulus targeted at entrepreneurship, trust-building, and citizen prosperity.
The Union Budget for 2017-18 pledged relief for rural India, middle class taxpayers and small and medium-sized companies in the Union Budget 2017-18, saying the government would spend thousands of crores to double farmers' incomes, upgrade infrastructure and provide affordable housing. While unveiling the budget the Hon’ble Finance Minister emphasised that the budget is built on three pillars “Transform, Energise and Clean India”, that is, TEC India. This agenda of TEC India seeks to transform the quality of governance and quality of life of the citizens of India, energise various sections of society, especially the youth and the vulnerable sections of the society and enable them to unleash their true potential. The emphasis of TEC India is also to clean the country from the evils of corruption, black money, and non-transparent political funding. The main focus of the Budget has been to boost government expenditure in order to increase growth, and to muster employment generation.
The Finance Minister said the Indian economy was doing well despite global trends of slowing growth in other emerging economies. He also delivered a big relief to foreign portfolio investors by exempting them from indirect transfer provisions. The centre’s budget size has been pegged at Rs. 21.47 lakh crore, with an increase of 25.47 per cent in capital expenditure. As regards fiscal consolidation, the FM has targeted fiscal deficit of 3.2 per cent for 2017-18 as against earlier target of 3 per cent. For agriculture and rural sector, Mr Jaitley has increased the allocation by 24 per cent to Rs. 1.87 lakh crore for 2017-18. In the case of infrastructure, the planned public investment stood at massive Rs. 3.96 lakh crore.
We have developed an analysis of the budget, which includes opinion pieces from eminent economists and experts.
Missed out on the Union Budget 2017 Presentation?
Indian Finance Minister, Mr. Arun Jaitely has once again taken the nation by wave with his pro-poor, pro-growth, pro-middle class, pro-youth & paradigm shifting Budget. Read the highlights of the Budget here.
This presentation has been prepared to give a glimpse of Union Budget 2017-18. It will come handy for management students who have Finance as one of their subjects.
This slide deck includes the highlights of the recent Union Budget of India for the financial year 2017-18 announced by Mr Arun Jaitley (Finance Minister) on 2nd Feb 2017.
The document summarizes key points from the 2017-18 Union Budget of India presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. The budget focused on 10 themes: farmers, rural population, youth, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, digital economy, fiscal management, tax proposals, and political party funding. Key allocations and policy changes are outlined for agriculture, rural development, education, healthcare, infrastructure, energy, taxation, and other sectors. The budget was positively received in stock markets but rail stocks fell due to proposed rail allocation. Certain items like cigarettes and LED components will be costlier while online rail tickets and LNG will be cheaper after the budget.
The document summarizes key points from the Indian government's 2017-18 budget. It outlines tax proposals including reduced personal income tax rates and corporate tax cuts for small businesses. It also allocates funds for healthcare, including expanding insurance coverage and setting up new medical colleges. On education, it proposes expanding vocational training programs. For rural development, it aims to provide homes, irrigation, electricity and increase credit for farmers. It also sets targets for expanding digital infrastructure and rail network improvements.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley presented the Union Budget for 2016-17 and reaffirmed that the economy is on the right track. The budget is aimed at strengthening India's firewalls by ensuring macroeconomic stability and prudent fiscal management; driving growth through domestic demand; and economic reforms and policy initiatives to change lives for the better. With measured focus on social sector reforms and recapitalising India's banking system, this Budget has an overarching focus on improving agriculture, and scaling infrastructure, all of which bode well for the country. The government is now planning to rationalise and channel subsidies to the poor by increasing the burden on the rich, and by increasing spending on public welfare through its own kitty.
Mr. Jaitley said the Union Budget is aimed at improving rural infrastructure and increasing rural income, as the biggest challenge to the economy is agrarian distress. Applauding the budget presented by the Finance Minister, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the Budget is pro-village, pro-poor and pro–farmers, and is focused on bringing about qualitative changes in the country through a slew of time-bound programmes.
The attached note captures key highlights and summarises major announcements in the Budget.
Please reach out to us should you wish to understand more about the Union Budget and its impact on your business
The document is a summary of the key announcements made in the Indian Union Budget for 2018-19 presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. Some of the key highlights include:
- Increased focus on agriculture and rural economy through initiatives like Operation Green, e-NAM, and increasing MSP for crops.
- Investments in education through the new RISE initiative and setting up more medical colleges and Ekalavya schools.
- Allocations for railways infrastructure projects, electrification, dedicated freight corridors and procurement of trains and locomotives.
- Tax relief for small businesses and salaried individuals through standard deduction and lower tax rates.
- Increased investments in infrastructure like roads, airports,
The document summarizes key aspects of the India Budget 2016, including:
1) It focuses on 9 pillars to transform India including agriculture, rural employment, social sectors, infrastructure, financial reforms, and ease of doing business.
2) Key allocations include Rs. 36,000 crores for agriculture and farmer welfare, Rs. 38,500 crores for MGNREGS, and Rs. 2,21,246 crores for infrastructure development.
3) Reforms aim to boost startups, manufacturing, and increase FDI in various sectors such as insurance and pension funds.
Edelman India Analysis
Standing in for Mr Arun Jaitley, Finance Minister (FM), Piyush Goyal presented the Union Budget of India earlier today. Highlighting achievements of various Government schemes, Mr Goyal stated that the Government led by Prime Minister Modi has been the most decisive and transformational in executing structural reforms.
Focused on rural and inclusive development over the next 5-10 years, the Budget included significant announcements ahead of the General Elections while also outlining ten dimensions of the Government’s Vision for India’s development by 2030. The launch of, “Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN),” which aims to supplement rural income, captured the limelight of this year’s budget. The middle class has also benefited with higher gratuity, broadening of the tax-exempt bracket and waivers on income tax on notional rent. A mega pension scheme for workers in the unorganised sector was also announced along with health coverage under the ‘Ayushman Bharat’ scheme.
The Government has budgeted for overall expenditure of INR 27.8 trillion in 2019-20, an increase of 13% over the previous year’s estimates, while targeting a fiscal deficit of 3.4% in 2019-20 and 3% in 2020-21.
A budget is a quantitative expression of a financial plan, we all know that but, not everyone understands the whole of Budget. For this reason alone, the budget views are presented in a PPT format for your reference.
A presentation by CA Manish Hingar
The document summarizes the key highlights from the Union Budget for 2018-19, including a focus on improving rural healthcare and education through programs like a health insurance program covering 50 crore people and investments in building more schools. It also outlines initiatives to boost infrastructure development, support MSMEs, and continue fiscal consolidation. Overall the budget aims to enhance welfare programs while also promoting growth through various reforms and policy measures.
The key direct tax proposals include increasing the surcharge on individuals earning over Rs. 1 crore to 15%, taxing dividend income over Rs. 10 lakhs at 10%, and introducing an equalization levy of 6% on non-resident companies for digital transactions. Notable corporate tax proposals include a concessional 10% tax rate for income from patents developed in India, 100% deduction of profits for 3 years for eligible startups, and phasing out of certain tax exemptions by 2020. The budget also introduced an income declaration scheme and a direct tax dispute resolution scheme.
The budget document outlines key details of the 2017-18 Indian union budget. Some highlights include a fiscal deficit target of 3.2% of GDP, total borrowing estimated at Rs. 546332 crore, a reduction of the corporate tax rate for MSMEs to 25%, and a reduction of the tax rate on income up to Rs. 5 lakh to 5%. It also notes a 25.4% increase in capital expenditure from the previous year.
The 2013-14 Union Budget of India was presented by Finance Minister P. Chidambaram on February 28, 2013. Key aspects included allocating Rs. 37,330 crore to health sector, Rs. 65,867 crore to education, Rs. 27,049 crore to agriculture, and Rs. 1,000 crore for a women's bank and Nirbhaya Fund for women's empowerment. The budget aimed to boost growth while reducing the deficit and increasing rural spending power. However, taxes for high income earners were raised and the Sensex fell due to the budget.
The document provides details about the Union Budget of India for 2009-2010. It summarizes the key aspects of the budget including total estimated expenditures of Rs. 10.2 trillion and estimated revenues of Rs. 6.1 trillion. It outlines spending increases for sectors like rural development, education, health, and infrastructure development. The economic survey highlights India's GDP growth target of 7.5% for 2009-2010 with challenges from the global slowdown and inflation addressed through fiscal policy changes.
The budget document outlines several major reforms and policy initiatives in the 2017-18 Indian budget. It includes advancing the date of budget presentation, merging the railway budget with the main budget, and abolishing the distinction between plan and non-plan expenditure. It also outlines changes to direct and indirect taxation rates, as well as allocations for infrastructure development, rural development, healthcare, education, skill development, agriculture and banking sector reforms.
The budget proposal is divided into 10 themes: farmers, rural population, youth, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, digital economy, public services, fiscal management, and tax administration. Key points include increased farmer credit, rural development programs, skill training for youth, healthcare initiatives, infrastructure spending on railways and roads, financial reforms, digital payment promotion, and tax reforms including lowering personal income tax rates. The budget aims to boost rural spending and contains major reforms like merging the railway budget.
The budget allocates funds across several key sectors of the Indian economy. It aims to double farmer incomes by 2022 by allocating Rs. 35,984 crore for agriculture and providing irrigation for 28.5 lakh hectares at a cost of Rs. 17,000 crore. It also increases allocations for rural development, social sectors like education and healthcare, and infrastructure development. While some taxes are increased on tobacco, luxury goods, and diesel vehicles, individual taxpayers below Rs. 5 lakh annual income and senior citizens receiving medical insurance of Rs. 130,000 will receive relief.
The 2018-19 Union Budget focused on 6 key themes: farmers, rural population, poor/underprivileged, infrastructure, financial sector, and tax proposals. It allocated funds to various agriculture, rural development, and healthcare initiatives. It also aimed to boost infrastructure development through increased funding for highways, railways, and metro networks. Additionally, the budget proposed reforms to encourage investment and ease of business through changes to FDI policy, Mudra loans, and SEBI norms. The overall objectives were to focus on health, develop MSMEs, boost agriculture, prioritize rural development and education.
The Union Budget 2017 document summarizes key changes announced in the Indian Union Budget of 2017 and their implications. Some of the major changes include reductions in income tax rates for individual income between 2.5 to 5 lakhs, a reduction in the income tax rebate amount, restrictions on cash transactions over 300,000 rupees, a 10% income tax surcharge for incomes between 50 to 100 lakhs, and reductions in the permissible amount for cash donations from 10,000 to 2,000 rupees. The budget also included exempting long term capital gains from equity investments from tax if securities transaction tax was paid, penalties for delayed income tax filings, and changes to long term capital gains holding periods and the
The document summarizes the key aspects of the Union Budget 2020-21 presented by the Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, including structural reforms focused on governance, financial sector, agriculture, and infrastructure development, as well as expenditure estimates and tax proposals aimed at boosting the Indian economy and achieving the government's vision of an aspirational India. The budget aims to balance growth promotion with fiscal discipline through measured stimulus targeted at entrepreneurship, trust-building, and citizen prosperity.
The Union Budget for 2017-18 pledged relief for rural India, middle class taxpayers and small and medium-sized companies in the Union Budget 2017-18, saying the government would spend thousands of crores to double farmers' incomes, upgrade infrastructure and provide affordable housing. While unveiling the budget the Hon’ble Finance Minister emphasised that the budget is built on three pillars “Transform, Energise and Clean India”, that is, TEC India. This agenda of TEC India seeks to transform the quality of governance and quality of life of the citizens of India, energise various sections of society, especially the youth and the vulnerable sections of the society and enable them to unleash their true potential. The emphasis of TEC India is also to clean the country from the evils of corruption, black money, and non-transparent political funding. The main focus of the Budget has been to boost government expenditure in order to increase growth, and to muster employment generation.
The Finance Minister said the Indian economy was doing well despite global trends of slowing growth in other emerging economies. He also delivered a big relief to foreign portfolio investors by exempting them from indirect transfer provisions. The centre’s budget size has been pegged at Rs. 21.47 lakh crore, with an increase of 25.47 per cent in capital expenditure. As regards fiscal consolidation, the FM has targeted fiscal deficit of 3.2 per cent for 2017-18 as against earlier target of 3 per cent. For agriculture and rural sector, Mr Jaitley has increased the allocation by 24 per cent to Rs. 1.87 lakh crore for 2017-18. In the case of infrastructure, the planned public investment stood at massive Rs. 3.96 lakh crore.
We have developed an analysis of the budget, which includes opinion pieces from eminent economists and experts.
Missed out on the Union Budget 2017 Presentation?
Indian Finance Minister, Mr. Arun Jaitely has once again taken the nation by wave with his pro-poor, pro-growth, pro-middle class, pro-youth & paradigm shifting Budget. Read the highlights of the Budget here.
Changes proposed in service tax by union budget 2016 17CA Jitendra Panwar
The document discusses changes made to India's service tax law through the Union Budget of 2016-2017. Key changes include:
1) Introduction of a new 0.5% Krishi Kalyan Cess on all taxable services to finance agriculture initiatives.
2) The effective service tax rate is now 15% with the addition of the 0.5% Krishi Kalyan Cess and 0.5% Swachh Bharat Cess.
3) Lottery services provided in accordance with the Lotteries (Regulation) Act are now taxable. Air-conditioned stage carriage transport services are also taxable.
This presentation is an attempt to summarize the salient points of the Indian Budget 2016-17.It is a presentation with basic details and its target audience are students undertaking Graduate level and MBA courses.
The document defines what a budget is according to various sources and provides details about the key components of a government budget. A budget is a financial plan that estimates revenues and expenditures for a set period, usually a year. It includes estimates of taxes, borrowing, expenditures on programs and services. The budget helps allocate resources and implement economic policies.
This document provides a summary of the key features of the Union Budget 2016-17 presented by the Finance Minister. It discusses the growth of the Indian economy in 2015-16 at 7.6% despite global challenges. The budget focuses on boosting domestic demand, continuing economic reforms, and enhancing expenditure on priority sectors like agriculture, rural development, infrastructure, and social sectors. It outlines fiscal consolidation measures like maintaining the fiscal deficit target, increasing plan expenditure, and rationalizing central schemes. It also summarizes the allocations and initiatives proposed for agriculture, rural development, social sectors, education, and job creation.
Finance Act 2016 Amendments in Income Tax Laws - A Y 2017-18CA Janardhana Gouda
Finance Act 2016 Amendments in Income Tax Laws applicable for Assessment year 2017-18 on wards. Major Amendments for Individuals, Companies and Changes in TDS and TCS Provisions etc
Indian agriculture accounts for 17% of India's GDP and employs 50% of the workforce. The 2017 Union Budget allocated Rs. 1,87,223 crore to rural, agriculture, and allied sectors, a 24% increase over the previous year. Key initiatives included increasing agricultural credit to Rs. 10 lakh crore, expanding crop insurance coverage, establishing micro-irrigation and dairy funds, and allocating additional funds for rural employment and development programs.
The debate over the implementation of Goods and Services Tax (GST) has been tiresomely long.
GST is a critical reform in spurring growth in the Indian economy.
When it is introduced, GST is expected to make the tax system simpler and will also help in increased compliance, boost tax revenues, reduce the tax outflow in the hands of the consumers and make exports competitive. The new government will hopefully set forth a roadmap for the implementation of GST soon.
Today’s lesson on GST attempts to simplify this concept for you.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that Rs 500 and Rs 1000 banknotes would no longer be legal tender as of midnight. This was an act of demonetization in India aimed at combating black money and corruption. Demonetization involves removing a currency's status as legal tender and replacing it with a new currency. Previous examples of demonetization in other countries are discussed.
The Union Budget 2009-10 was presented by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee and aimed to lead the economy back to high GDP growth, promote inclusive development, and improve government delivery. Key measures included increased infrastructure spending, rural employment guarantees, and debt relief for farmers. The budget estimated revenues of Rs. 10.2 trillion and expenditures of Rs. 10.2 trillion, with a fiscal deficit of 6.8% of GDP.
This document provides a summary of the key features of the Indian government's budget for 2016-2017. It outlines the economic challenges faced, priorities such as job creation and infrastructure development, sectoral allocations for agriculture, rural development, social programs, and reforms planned in taxation, financial sector, ease of doing business and fiscal management. The budget aims to boost growth while ensuring macroeconomic stability through prudent fiscal policy and a focus on priority sectors.
The document provides an overview and summary of key aspects of the Union Budget for 2015-16 presented by the Finance Minister of India. It discusses the economic performance in 2014-15 with GDP growth of 8.4% and declining inflation. It outlines the fiscal deficit target of 3.9% of GDP for 2015-16. It highlights sectors like agriculture, banking, infrastructure, and social security initiatives. The budget aims to boost investment in infrastructure, support rural development and farmers, promote ease of doing business, and provide social security to more citizens.
The Finance Minister has presented a realistic and pragmatic Budget aimed at striking the right chord with all segments of the society and successfully delivering on the nation’s expectations. The Budget has attempted the difficult task of deftly maintaining the fiscal deficit within prudent levels, boosting consumption spending and investment demand while enhancing welfare expenditure. The Finance Minister needs to be congratulated for maintaining a check on the fiscal deficit despite the overwhelming need to raise public expenditure to boost growth. The fiscal deficit of 3.5 per cent of GDP for Budget 2016-17 will be lowered to 3.2 per cent for the coming year. At the same time, it is commendable that the Budget reduced the revenue deficit to 1.9 per cent of GDP, while increasing capital expenditure by over 25 per cent. Adherence to the fiscal prudence imperatives will lay the foundation for long-term growth and CII appreciates this commitment.
This 3 sentence summary provides the high level information from the document:
The document discusses India's Budget for 2016-17, noting that it maintains the government's commitment to fiscal consolidation while implementing important reforms like reducing corporate tax rates. It also initiates reforms to improve public expenditure management and transition to a medium-term fiscal framework. However, the budget continues practices like increasing cesses and maintaining a high number of tax exemptions that impact revenue collection.
Analysis of-the-national-budget-fy-2016-17-powerpointRakib Hasan Imon
The document provides an analysis of Bangladesh's national budget for fiscal year 2016-17 by CPD. It summarizes the context of the budget, medium-term outlook, public finance framework, sectoral allocations, social sectors, local governments, and reform measures. It was prepared by a team of researchers and experts led by Dr. Debapriya Bhattacharya and Professor Mustafizur Rahman. The analysis deploys five criteria to assess the budget's clarity, alignment with priorities, development framework, justification of allocations, and management plan.
- The document discusses the state of the Indian economy from an investor's perspective. It notes that India has emerged as one of the fastest growing large economies in the world, with GDP growth of over 7% in the first half of 2015-2016.
- Key factors contributing to India's economic growth include a rise in domestic consumption and investment. Inflation has remained below target levels, allowing the central bank to reduce interest rates to support demand. Narrowing current account deficits have also strengthened macroeconomic stability.
- The government is pursuing fiscal consolidation while increasing capital expenditures. Reforms to FDI policy and regulations have led to rising foreign investment inflows. However, challenges remain around stalled infrastructure projects, stressed bank balance
It gives me a pleasure to present the summary and analysis of Union Budget 2015.
While you may have the snapshot, here is a document which will not only give you crisp highlights, but would also decode the impact of Budget 2015 on You, Your company and Your sector.
Hope you find this analysis useful in taking business decisions and align your company's strategy with over all economic climate for the upcoming financial year.
Would love to hear your feedback on the usefulness of the same.
The interim budget speech summarizes India's economic performance and initiatives in 2013-2014. Key points include:
- The fiscal deficit was contained at 4.6% of GDP and current account deficit at $45 billion. Inflation moderated.
- Agriculture production reached new records. Infrastructure projects were accelerated, including power, highways, ports.
- Major economic reforms were implemented, such as liberalizing FDI, issuing new bank licenses, and restructuring power distribution.
- Significant social initiatives and legislation were passed regarding land acquisition, food security, and pensions.
The interim budget speech summarizes India's economic performance and initiatives over the past year. Key points include:
- The fiscal deficit and current account deficit were contained while foreign exchange reserves increased. Inflation moderated.
- Agricultural production reached new records while credit exceeded targets. Infrastructure projects were accelerated.
- Major economic reforms were implemented including railway fare rationalization, sugar decontrol, and company/pension law updates.
- Social initiatives included land rights distribution, food security legislation, and expanding health/education programs.
India's working age population increased by 84.1 million from 2011-12 to 2015-16. However, the actual labor force only increased by 20.1 million, meaning over three-fourths of the working age population did not join the labor force. While the share of agriculture in employment has declined, it remains over 45% and its performance directly impacts the size of the labor force. The number of jobs created during this period was only 14.6 million per year, insufficient to absorb the growing working age population. Certain states accounted for a disproportionately large share of the labor force and workforce.
The document provides an overview and analysis of global and Indian markets in March 2015.
- Global markets rebounded in February with signs of ceasefire in Ukraine and monetary easing by central banks. Indian markets remained cautious ahead of the budget.
- The budget focused on fiscal consolidation, infrastructure spending, tax reforms and measures to attract foreign investment. Capital expenditure was increased substantially to restart the investment cycle.
- The presentation recommends investing systematically in Indian equities, as large caps trade at a discount and the budget provides a long-term vision for economic recovery. Cyclical sectors remain attractive on valuation.
The document summarizes key points from India's 2015 union budget and rail budget. The union budget aimed for 8% GDP growth, promoted "Make in India," and increased infrastructure investment. It also eased business regulations and focused on clean energy. The rail budget prioritized safety, technology adoption, and becoming more disabled-friendly. While the budgets aimed to boost growth, some criticized its lack of education funding and failure to lower income tax brackets. Overall, the budgets sought to promote investment and position India's economy for stronger performance.
The document summarizes key details from the Union Budget for 2016-17 presented by the Finance Minister in India. Some highlights include:
- The budget emphasized growth in agriculture and infrastructure while aiming to reduce the fiscal deficit.
- It focused on rural development, social reforms, and job creation while trying to balance rural and industry needs.
- The Indian economy is estimated to grow at 7.6% in 2015-16, driven by private consumption and fixed investment. Inflation declined while the services sector grew strongly.
- Exports and imports declined in 2015-16 due to global factors, though the current account deficit fell as well due to remittances and capital inflows.
It gives me a pleasure to present the summary of India Budget Synthesis 2014.
While you may already have the snapshot, here is a document which will not only give you crisp highlights, but would also decode the impact of Budget 2014 on You, Your Company and Your Sector.
Hope you find this analysis useful in taking clearer business decisions and align your company's strategy with the overall economic climate in the balance part of financial year 2014-15.
Would love to hear your feedback on the usefulness of the same.
Dear Friends,
It gives us a pleasure to present the summary of India Budget Synthesis 2014.
While you may already have the snapshot, here is a document which will not only give you crisp highlights, but would also decode the impact of Budget 2014 on You, Your Company and Your Sector.
Hope you find this analysis useful in taking clearer business decisions and align your company's strategy with the overall economic climate in the balance part of financial year 2014-15.
Would love to hear your feedback on the usefulness of the same."
Regards,
Vishal Thakkar | Group Head - Corporate Relations | Synthesis Group
Hand Phone: 91 9320007891 | Boardline: 91 22 24093737 | Fax: 91 22 24093737
INDIA is one of the oldest civilizations in the world
with a kaleidoscopic variety and rich cultural heritage.
It is the seventh-largest country by area, the second-most
populous country with over 1.2 billion people, and the
most populous democracy in the world. In the present
scenario, India’s economy is the fourth largest by purchasing
power parity (PPP) and 10th largest by nominal
gross domestic product (GDP), globally.
India has seen a systematic transition from being a
closed door economy to an open economy since the beginning
of economic reforms in the country in 1991.
These reforms have had a far-reaching impact and have
helped India unleash its enormous growth potential.
Today India is one of the fastest growing economies in
the world and has emerged as a key destination for foreign
investors in recent years. According to UNCTAD’s
World Investment Prospects Survey 2012–2014, India is
the third-most attractive destination for FDI (after China
and the US) in the world.
India’s GDP has also grown at around 7.9 per cent between
2003 and 2012. This trend, according to the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), is likely to continue for
the next five years with an average GDP growth rate of
7.7 per cent per annum till 2017. India’s GDP for 2015,
valued at US$ 2.183 trillion at current prices is the 10th
largest in the world1.
It gives me a pleasure to present the summary and analysis of Union Budget 2016.
While you may have the snapshot, here is a document which will not only give you crisp highlights, but would also decode the impact of Budget 2016 on You, Your company and Your sector.
Hope you find this analysis useful in taking business decisions and align your company's strategy with over all economic climate for the upcoming financial year.
Would love to hear your feedback on the usefulness of the same.
Thanks a lot.
Long on aspirations and short on action - A monograph on the Union Budget 201...D Murali ☆
Long on aspirations and short on action - A monograph on the Union Budget 2015-16 - B. Yerram Raju - Article published in Business Advisor, Budget 2015 special issue http://www.magzter.com/IN/Shrinikethan/Business-Advisor/Business/
Foreign direct investment situation in BangladeshRifat Ahsan
The document summarizes the current state of foreign direct investment (FDI) in Bangladesh in 2016. It discusses that Bangladesh saw record FDI inflows of $2.235 billion in 2015, a 44% increase over 2014. Several factors that attract investors to Bangladesh are highlighted, such as a large, young and educated workforce, increasing trade integration and urbanization, and a favorable investment environment and economic growth. Upcoming challenges for FDI in 2017 include a potential decline in global FDI flows. Overall, the document provides an overview of recent FDI trends and the factors driving investment in Bangladesh.
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Vicinity Jobs’ data includes more than three million 2023 OJPs and thousands of skills. Most skills appear in less than 0.02% of job postings, so most postings rely on a small subset of commonly used terms, like teamwork.
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Seminar on gender diversity spillovers through ownership networks at FAME|GRAPE. Presenting novel research. Studies in economics and management using econometrics methods.
5 Tips for Creating Standard Financial ReportsEasyReports
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2. Elemental Economics - Mineral demand.pdfNeal Brewster
After this second you should be able to: Explain the main determinants of demand for any mineral product, and their relative importance; recognise and explain how demand for any product is likely to change with economic activity; recognise and explain the roles of technology and relative prices in influencing demand; be able to explain the differences between the rates of growth of demand for different products.
Understanding how timely GST payments influence a lender's decision to approve loans, this topic explores the correlation between GST compliance and creditworthiness. It highlights how consistent GST payments can enhance a business's financial credibility, potentially leading to higher chances of loan approval.
OJP data from firms like Vicinity Jobs have emerged as a complement to traditional sources of labour demand data, such as the Job Vacancy and Wages Survey (JVWS). Ibrahim Abuallail, PhD Candidate, University of Ottawa, presented research relating to bias in OJPs and a proposed approach to effectively adjust OJP data to complement existing official data (such as from the JVWS) and improve the measurement of labour demand.
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"Does Foreign Direct Investment Negatively Affect Preservation of Culture in the Global South? Case Studies in Thailand and Cambodia."
Do elements of globalization, such as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), negatively affect the ability of countries in the Global South to preserve their culture? This research aims to answer this question by employing a cross-sectional comparative case study analysis utilizing methods of difference. Thailand and Cambodia are compared as they are in the same region and have a similar culture. The metric of difference between Thailand and Cambodia is their ability to preserve their culture. This ability is operationalized by their respective attitudes towards FDI; Thailand imposes stringent regulations and limitations on FDI while Cambodia does not hesitate to accept most FDI and imposes fewer limitations. The evidence from this study suggests that FDI from globally influential countries with high gross domestic products (GDPs) (e.g. China, U.S.) challenges the ability of countries with lower GDPs (e.g. Cambodia) to protect their culture. Furthermore, the ability, or lack thereof, of the receiving countries to protect their culture is amplified by the existence and implementation of restrictive FDI policies imposed by their governments.
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Independent Study - College of Wooster Research (2023-2024)
Union Budget 2017-18
1. 1
“Transform, Energise & Clean
India” – TEC India
UNION BUDGET 2017 - 2018
Dewan P. N. Chopra & Co.
This year's budget
reforms old
processes,
empowers our
human capital &
aims to rejuvenate
the economy.
@NarendraModi
2. 2
The BJP led NDA since elected in May 2014 as the government of India has been attempting
transformative shifts for the governance of our nation including policy and system based
administration, transparency & objectivity in action, targeted delivery. One such
transformative shift was the removal of high value denominated notes overnight from the
financial system with the objective of radically eliminating a parallel economy (“Black
Money”) plaguing the country and its economic system for decades.
Though a novel idea, the impact of this change may not have been what the government
anticipated. This single event with a sudden hault to the economic engines of the nation has
already led to an estimated decline in GDP growth by 1% for FY 16-17 with a cascading impact
lingering on for a period and to an extent still unknown.
The Economic Survey 2016-17 documented by the Chief Economic Advisor Mr Arvind
Subramanian, has been much appreciated by many for its depth, detail and craft. However,
embedded in this document were numbers that couldn’t be ignored with Private Investments
declining by 7%, Credit growth at its lowest in 23 years, Non Performing Assets of Public
Sector Banks at 12%, IIP manufacturing down by 2.2%, reflecting a need to take drastic fiscal
measures to boost investment drive, production, job creation, liquidity and consumption to
revive the economic engine and bring it back onto the growth trajectory of 8% and above.
In the midst of this, our Honorable Finance Minister, Mr Arun Jaitley, presented the Union
Budget for FY 17-18. A budget that was expected by many to take radical financial and
regulatory steps to mobilize the system through aggressive tax breaks, allocation to
investments, driving public private partnerships, focusing on Infrastructure and Real Estate to
facilitate job creation and offering SOPs to individuals, more so in the rural areas who are
worst effected by demonetization. This to be done while ensuring fiscal discipline.
As articulated in his speech, the budget was driven by the agenda of TEC India “Transform,
Energise and Clean India”. This agenda dove tailed into 10 distinct themes including support
to farmers, rural infrastructure, jobs and skill development for the youth, housing, health and
security for the poor, stability of the financial sector and bringing transparency and efficiency
through a digital economy.
What transpired through the Honorable ministers speech was a budget true to its theme but
not as radical as some may have expected. With limited measures introduced supporting
Exports, Manufacturing, Healthcare, ITeS, Hospitality & Tourism etc., many felt neglected
however applauded the fiscal discipline restricting the Deficit to 3.2% in FY17-18 against 3.9%
in FY 15-16.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot FOREWORD
3. 3
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot FOREWORD
Further, the current budget focused primarily on changes in Direct Taxes with minimal
changes under Customs, Excise and Service Tax given they shall largely be subsumed under
Goods and Service Tax post implementation in FY 17-18
In this light, our team at DPNC has compiled key highlights of the Union Budget 2017-18. We
hope the same is concise yet highlights aspects that needed due consideration.
For any queries, clarification or suggestions, please do revert on our coordinates herein.
Regards,
Dhruv Chopra
Partner, Dewan P.N. Chopra & Co.
4. 4
INDEX
Budget Allocation at a Glance 2017-18
Economic Performance 2016-17
Fiscal Summary
Sectoral Highlights
Direct Taxation
Individual Taxation
Corporate Taxation
International Taxation
Transfer Pricing
Assessment, Litigation and Others
Indirect Taxation
Annexure I
Disclaimer
5
6
8
9
16
21
25
28
30
39
40
45
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
5. 5
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
BUDGET ALLOCATION AT A GLANCE
FY 17-18
• Agenda for Budget 2017-18 is : “Transform, Energise and Clean India” – TEC India
• TEC India seeks to
o Transform the quality of governance and quality of life of our people;
o Energise various sections of society, especially the youth and the vulnerable, and
enable them to unleash their true potential; and
o Clean the country from the evils of corruption, black money and non-transparent
political funding
RUPEE INFLOW RUPEE OUTFLOW
19%
19%
16%
9%
14%
10%
10%
3%
Borrowings & Other Liabilities
Corporate Tax
Income Tax
Customs
Union Excise Tax
Service Tax & other Taxes
Non- Tax Revenue
10%
11%
18%
9%10%
5%
24%
13%
Centrally Sponsored Scheme
Centre Sector Scheme
Interest Payments
Defence
Subsidies
Finance Commission & Other Transfers
States' share of taxes & duties
Other Expenditures
Source: Budget At A Glance 2017-18 Source: Budget At A Glance 2017-18
BUDGET SNAPSHOT
ALLOCATION TO KEY EXPENDITURE
6.24%
12.59%
11.82%
2.55%
0.91%
0.12%
3.66%
1.49%
0.74%
2.46%
1.94%
3.80%
24.91%
0.65%
2.95%
0.26%
5.18%
0.99%
1.69%
1.13%
6.34%
5.41%
0.65%
1.51%
6.36%
12.31%
11.55%
2.67%
1.14%
0.13%
3.65%
1.49%
0.67%
2.16%
1.98%
3.91%
23.98%
0.92%
3.05%
0.25%
5.71%
1.00%
1.67%
1.10%
6.62%
5.14%
0.66%
1.88%
6.11%
12.22%
11.20%
2.65%
1.15%
0.12%
3.71%
1.71%
0.69%
1.38%
2.28%
3.90%
24.37%
0.97%
3.15%
0.24%
5.99%
1.04%
1.83%
0.59%
6.39%
5.79%
0.62%
1.89%
2016-17 BE 2016-17 RE 2017-18 BE
Source: Budget At A Glance 2017-18
ROADMAP & PRIORITIES
6. 6
7.2
7.6
7.1
2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 E
Growth in GDP(%)
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
FY 16-17
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP)
• The Indian economy has registered growth
rate of GDP at 7.1% for 2016-17 as against
7.6% for 2015-16. Impact of demonetization in
Q3 and Q4 is apparent.
• Post-demonetization, it is expected that the
real GDP growth will range between 6.75% to
7.5% for 2017-18. Increased allocation to
capital expenditure, infrastructure and focus
on rural area and agriculture would drive the
extent of revival.
• The growth rate of gross value added (GVA) at
constant basic prices is 7.0% for 2016-17 as
against 7.2% in 2015-16. The negative growth
is estimated to be 6.7% for 2016-17 (H2) as
compare to 7.2% in 2016-17 (H1).
INFLATION
• The average Consumer Price Index (CPI)
inflation has witnessed downward trend from
5.9% in 2014-15 to 4.9% in 2015-16 during Apr-
Dec’16, owing to abundance of Kharif
agricultural and pulses production. Also, the
decline in pulses prices has majorly
contributed to the decline in CPI inflation
reaching 3.4% by end-Dec’16.
• The WPI has significantly declined to (-) 2.8% in
2015-16 from 2.0% in 2014-15, averaging to
2.9% during Apr-Dec’16. However, there has
been the reversal of WPI inflation, from a (-)
5.1% in Aug’ 15 to 3.4% in Dec’16 owing to rise
in international oil prices.
Source: Economic Survey 2016-17
Source: Economic Survey 2016-17
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
6.75-7.5
*Average of first three Quarters for 2016-17
2
-2.8
2.9
5.9
4.9 4.9
2014-15 2015-16 2016-17*
Inflation Index
Inflation Index WPI Inflation Index CPI
7. 7
• It has been observed that the core inflation has
been more stable, around 4.5%-5.0% for the
year 2016-17.
• The outlook for the year as a whole is for CPI
inflation to be below RBI’s target of 5%, a trend
likely to be assisted by demonetization.
EXPORT/IMPORT
• The trend of negative growth in exports has
been reversed during 2016-17 (Apr-Dec), with
exports registering a growth of 0.7% to USD
198.8 billion from USD 197.3 billion in 2015-16
(Apr-Dec). The improvement in exports is due to
improvements in the world economy, led by
better growth in US and Germany.
• The imports have declined from USD 448 billion
in 2014-15 to USD 381 billion in 2015-16, owing
to decline in crude oil prices. During 2016-17
(Apr-Dec), the imports have declined by 7.4% to
USD 275.4 billion compared to the
corresponding period of previous year.
• India’s trade deficit has declined by 23.5% to
USD 76.5 billion in 2016-17 (Apr-Dec) as
compared to USD 100.1 billion in 2015-16 (Apr-
Dec).
• India’s external sector position has been
comfortable, with the current account deficit
(CAD) significantly reduced from USD 88.2
billion (4.8% of GDP) in 2012-13 to USD22.2
billion (1.1% of GDP) in 2015-16. It is further
declined to 0.3% of GDP for 2016-17 (H1).
• Robust flow of FDI and net positive inflow of
foreign portfolio investment were sufficient to
finance CAD leading to accretion of foreign
exchange reserves from USD 350 billion (Jan’16)
to USD 361 billion (Jan’17).
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
-1.3
-17.6
0.7
-0.5
-15.5
-7.4
-20
-15
-10
-5
0
5
2014-15 2015-16 2016-17*
Export Import
*Time period for 2016-17 is April-December
Source: Economic Survey 2016-17
“We expect the impact of demonetization will
gradually dissipate in 2017-18 and there will
be a recovery in economic growth,”
- IMF
8. 8
FISCAL SUMMARY
• Budget 2016-17 clearly indicates Government’s commitment to continue with fiscal
consolidation and projected fiscal deficit at 3.5% of GDP for 2016-17 as against 3.9% in 2015-
16.
• The fiscal deficit has been pegged to 3.2% for 2017-18 and has been committed to achieve
3% for next three years. The FRBM Review Committee has also provided for ‘Escape Clauses’,
for deviations up to 0.5% of GDP, from the stipulated fiscal deficit target.
• Despite demonetization effect, the indirect taxes have grown by 36.4% during November
2016.
• The strong growth in revenue expenditure during Apr-Nov’16 owing to 23.2% increase in
salaries due to implementation of the Seventh Pay Commission and a 39.5% increase in the
grants for creation of capital assets.
Source: Budget At A Glance 2017-18
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
2016-
17(BE)
2016-
17(RE)
2017-
18(BE)
Gross Fiscal Deficit 4.5 4 3.9 3.5 3.2 3.2
Revenue Deficit 3.2 2.9 2.5 2.3 2.1 1.9
Primary Deficit 1.1 0.8 0.7 0.3 0.3 0.1
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
Asa%ofGDP
BE: Budgeted Estimates, RE: Revised Estimates
“It was a fairly routine Budget... in the sense that there have not been much changes on the revenue side.
Nevertheless, I am happy that the fiscal deficit is maintained at 3.2 per cent. The original road map has set
it at 3 per cent.”
- C. Rangarajan (Former RBI Governer)
9. 9
SECTORAL HIGHLIGHTS
RURAL POPULATION
• Aim to bring one crore households out of poverty
and to make 50,000 Gram Panchayats poverty free
by 2019, the 150th birth anniversary of Gandhiji.
• MGNREGA allocation has increased by 25% to INR
48,000 cr. in 2017-18 as compared to INR 38,500
cr. last year, recorded as the highest ever in 2017-
18.
• Pace of construction of PMGSY roads accelerated
to 133 km roads per day in 2016-17, against an
avg. of 73 km during 2011-2014.
• On target to achieve 100% village electrification by
1st May 2018.
• Allocation for Prime Minister's Employment
Generation Program and Credit Support Schemes
has been increased three fold.
• Sanitation coverage in rural India has gone up
from 42% in Oct 2014 to about 60%.
• For imparting new skills to people in rural areas,
mason training will be provided to 5 lakh persons
by 2022.
• Total allocation for Rural, Agriculture and Allied
sectors is INR 1,87,223 cr.
YOUTH
• SWAYAM platform, leveraging IT, to be launched
with at least 350 online courses.
• National Testing Agency to be set-up as an
autonomous and self-sustained premier testing
organisation to conduct all entrance examinations
for higher education institutions.
• Skill Acquisition and Knowledge Awareness for
Livelihood Promotion programme (SANKALP) to
be launched at a cost of INR 4,000 cr. SANKALP
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“The Budget proposals to increase spends
in rural areas, infrastructure
development, poverty alleviation as well
as the agricultural sector should provide
a growth impetus to the Indian economy
and a pickup in consumption demand.”
- Y.C. Deveshwar, Chaiman (ITC)
10. 10
will provide market relevant training to 3.5 cr.
youth.
• Next phase of Skill Strengthening for Industrial
Value Enhancement (STRIVE) will also be
launched in 2017-18 at a cost of INR 2,200 cr.
• Innovation Fund for Secondary Education
proposed to encourage local innovation for
ensuring universal access, gender parity and
quality improvement to be introduced in 3,479
educationally backward districts.
• A scheme for creating employment in the leather
and footwear industries along the lines in
Textiles Sector to be launched.
THE POOR AND THE UNDERPRIVILEGED
• Affordable housing to be given infrastructure
status.
• National Housing Bank will refinance individual
housing loans of about INR 20,000 cr. in 2017-18.
• Two new All India Institutes of Medical Sciences
to be set up in Jharkhand and Gujarat.
• To foster a conducive labour environment,
legislative reforms will be undertaken to
simplify, rationalise and amalgamate the existing
labour laws into 4 Codes on (i) wages; (ii)
industrial relations; (iii) social security and
welfare; and (iv) safety and working conditions.
• For senior citizens, Aadhaar based Smart Cards
containing their health details will be
introduced.
INFRASTRUCTURE
• For transportation sector as a whole, including
rail, roads, shipping, provision has increased by
9% to INR 2,41,387 cr. in 2017-18 from INR
2,21,246 cr. in previous year.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“A good budget, has done a lot for housing and
for rural development. Disappointed with no
announcement on corporate tax.”
- Deepak Prakash,
Chairman( HDFC)
11. 11
N
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot • For 2017-18, the total capital and development
expenditure of Railways has been pegged at INR
1,31,000 cr. This includes INR 55,000 cr. provided
by the Government.
• Railway lines of 3,500 kms will be commissioned
in 2017-18. During 2017-18, at least 25 stations
are expected to be awarded for station
redevelopment.
• 500 stations will be made differently abled
friendly by providing lifts and escalators.
• It is proposed to feed about 7,000 stations with
solar power in the medium term.
• SMS based Clean My Coach Service has been
started.
• ‘Coach Mitra’, a single window interface, to
register all coach related complaints and
requirements to be launched.
• By 2019, all coaches of Indian Railways will be
fitted with bio toilets.
• A new Metro Rail Act will be enacted by
rationalising the existing laws. This will facilitate
greater private participation and investment in
construction and operation.
• In the road sector, Budget allocation for
highways increased from INR 57,976 cr. in BE
2016-17 to INR 64,900 cr. in 2017-18.
• 2,000 kms of coastal connectivity roads have
been identified for construction and
development.
• Total length of roads, including those under
PMGSY, built from 2014-15 till the current year
is about 1,40,000 kms which is significantly
higher than previous three years.
• Select airports in Tier 2 cities will be taken up for
operation and maintenance in the PPP mode.
“The growth will happen because of huge
investments that is happening. For example in
railways, the provision for Rs1.31 lakh crore for
capital expenditure is unprecedented in railway
history.”
- Suresh Prabhu
- (Union Railway Minister)
12. 12
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot • By the end of 2017-18, high speed broadband
connectivity on optical fibre will be available in
more than 1,50,000 gram panchayats, under
BharatNet. A DigiGaon initiative will be launched
to provide tele-medicine, education and skills
through digital technology.
• Proposed to set up strategic crude oil reserves at
2 more locations, namely, Chandikhole in Odisha
and Bikaner in Rajasthan. This will take our
strategic reserve capacity to 15.33 MMT.
• Second phase of Solar Park development to be
taken up for additional 20,000 MW capacity.
• For creating an eco-system to make India a
global hub for electronics manufacturing a
provision of INR 745 cr. in 2017-18 in incentive
schemes like M-SIPS and EDF.
• A new and restructured Central scheme with a
focus on export infrastructure, namely, Trade
Infrastructure for Export Scheme (TIES) will be
launched in 2017-18 A DigiGaon initiative will be
launched to provide tele-medicine, education
and skills through digital technology.
FINANCIAL SECTOR
• Foreign Investment Promotion Board to be
abolished in 2017-18 and further liberalisation of
FDI policy is under consideration.
• A mechanism to streamline institutional
arrangements for resolution of disputes in
infrastructure related construction contracts,
PPP and public utility contracts will be
introduced as an amendment to the Arbitration
and Conciliation Act 1996.
• Propose to create an integrated public sector ‘oil
major’ which will be able to match the
performance of international and domestic
private sector oil and gas companies.
• A new ETF with diversified CPSE stocks and other
Government holdings will be launched in 2017-
18.
“The abolition of Foreign Investment
Promotion Board is a step in the right direction
to improve the ease of doing business with
India.”
- GP Hinduja (Co.
Chairmam)
Hinduja Group
13. 13
0
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
• In line with the ‘Indradhanush’ roadmap, INR
10,000 cr. for recapitalisation of Banks provided
in 2017-18.
• Lending target under Pradhan Mantri Mudra
Yojana to be set at INR 2.44 lakh cr. Priority will
be given to Dalits, Tribals, Backward Classes and
Women.
DIGITAL ECONOMY
• 125 lakh people have adopted the BHIM app so
far. The Government will launch two new
schemes to promote the usage of BHIM; these
are, Referral Bonus Scheme for individuals and a
Cashback Scheme for merchants.
• Aadhaar Pay, a merchant version of Aadhaar
Enabled Payment System, will be launched
shortly.
• A Mission will be set up with a target of 2,500
crore digital transactions for 2017-18 through
UPI, USSD, Aadhaar Pay, IMPS and debit cards.
• A proposal to mandate all Government receipts
through digital means, beyond a prescribed limit,
is under consideration.
• Banks have targeted to introduce additional 10
lakh new POS terminals by March 2017. They will
be encouraged to introduce 20 lakh Aadhaar
based POS by September 2017.
• Proposed to create a Payments Regulatory Board
in the Reserve Bank of India by replacing the
existing Board for Regulation and Supervision of
Payment and Settlement Systems.
“The Budget has provided Rs. 10,000 crore for
recapitalization of banks in 2017-18. But what is
reassuring the FM’s statement that more will be
given if required.”
- Arundhati Bhattacharya (Chair-Managing
Director) State Bank of India
“The Union Budget 2017 reinforces government’s
reliance on technology for achieving development goals,
as it focuses on Infrastructure and empowering startups
and SMEs, although IT industry expectations on
facilitative proposals remain largely unmet... The budget
evangelizes digital payments and infrastructure, along
with promoting a transparent business environment”
- NASSCOM
14. 14
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
• No transaction above INR 3 lakh would be
permitted in cash subject to certain exceptions.
(Further detailed in Corporate Tax Section)
• Miniaturised POS card reader for m-POS (other
than mobile phones or tablet computers), micro
ATM standards version 1.5.1, Finger Print
Readers / Scanners and Iris Scanners and on their
parts and components for manufacture of such
devices to be exempt from BCD, Excise/CV duty
and SAD.
PUBLIC SERVICE
• To utilise the Head Post Offices as front offices
for rendering passport services.
PRUDENTIAL FISCAL MANAGEMENT
• Stepped up allocation for Capital expenditure by
25.4% over the previous year.
• Total resources being transferred to the States
and the Union Territories with Legislatures is INR
4.11 lakh cr., against INR 3.60 lakh cr. in BE 2016-
17.
• Net market borrowing of Government restricted
to INR 3.48 lakh cr. after buyback in 2017-18,
much lower than INR 4.25 lakh cr. of the previous
year.
TRANSPARENCY IN ELECTORAL FUNDING
• Need to cleanse the system of political funding
in India.
• Maximum amount of cash donation, a political
party can receive, will be INR 2000 from one
person.
• Political parties will be entitled to receive
donations by cheque or digital mode from their
donors.
“We welcome various measures to promote digital
economy announced in the new Budget.”
- Gopal Jiwarajka,
(President,
PHD Chamber of
Commerce)
“Any step to clean political funding will be
supported by us.”
- Rahul Gandhi
15. 15
UnionBudget2016-17
–ASnapshot
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot • Amendment to the Reserve Bank of India Act to
enable the issuance of electoral bonds in
accordance with a scheme that the Government
of India would frame in this regard.
• Every political party would have to file its return
within the time prescribed in accordance with
the provision of the Income-tax Act.
• Existing exemption to the political parties from
payment of income-tax would be available only
subject to the fulfilment of these conditions.
16. 16
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2016-17
–ASnapshot DIRECT TAXATION
The Direct Tax proposals are effective from A.Y. 2018-19
except otherwise stated.
INDIVIDUAL TAXATION
• No major change in the slab rate of personal
income-tax for A.Y. 2018-19, however there is
reduction of tax rate from 10% to 5% for
Individuals having income between Rs. 2.5 Lakh
and Rs. 5 Lakh.
• Rebate u/s 87A for Resident individual decreased
from Rs. 5000 to Rs. 2500 and will be available only
to individual having taxable income upto Rs. 3.5
Lakh.
• Surcharge @ 10% on Individuals, HUF, AOP, BOI or
artificial juridical person having income exceeding
Rs. 50 Lakh but not exceeding Rs.1 crore shall be
levied from AY 2018-19.
Tax on dividend u/s 115BBDA to extend to Other
persons
• Under Section 115BBDA, dividend received by
resident individual, HUF and Firm, in excess of Rs.
10 lakh is chargeable to tax at the rate of 10%;
• The said provisions are now proposed to be
extended to all resident assessees except (i)
domestic company, (ii) trusts, institutions, etc.
registered u/s 12AA or Section 10(23C).
TDS on rent to be deducted by Individual or HUF not
liable for tax audit
• A new Section 194IB is proposed to be inserted
w.e.f. 01st
June 2017 as per which, if any, Individual
or HUF (not liable for tax audit) pays rent in excess
of Rs. 50,000 for a month or part of the month,
then TDS @ 5% shall be deducted. TDS on payment
of rent by Individual or HUF liable for tax audit are
already covered u/s 194I.
• No TAN is required by the deductor deducting TDS
under this provision.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
General Tax Slabs
Income Tax Rate
Up to 2.5Lakhs Nil
Above 2.5Lakhs to 5 Lakhs 5%
Above 5 Lakhs to 10 Lakhs 20%
Above 10 Lakhs 30%
Senior Citizen Tax Slabs
Income Tax Rate
Up to 3 Lakhs Nil
Above 3Lakhs to 5 Lakhs 5%
Above 5 Lakhs to 10 Lakhs 20%
Above 10 Lakhs 30%
Super Senior Citizen Tax Slabs**
Income Tax Rate
Up to 5 Lakhs Nil
Above 5 Lakhs to 10 Lakhs 20%
Above 10 Lakhs 30%
*Every individual being resident of India, age 60
years or more but less than 80 years at any time
during the year.
** Every individual being resident of India, age 80
years or more at any time during the year.
17. 17
DIRECT TAXATION
Exemption under Capital Gain if land transferred
under Land Pooling Scheme in Andhra Pradesh
• A new Section 10(37A) is proposed to be inserted
to provide the Exemption of Capital Gain subject to
certain conditions to Individual or HUF who was
owner of land in specified areas of Andhra Pradesh
and who has transferred such land under Land
Pooling Scheme framed by Government of Andhra
Pradesh.
Restricting cash donations
• Under Section 80G, existing limit of deduction of
cash donation of Rs. 10,000 has been reduced to
Rs. 2,000.
Enabling Filing of Form 15G/ 15H for commission
payments specified u/s 194D
• Section 197A amended to enable any Individual or
HUF receiving insurance commission liable for TDS
u/s 194D to provide self-declaration in Form
15G/15H to the deductor that their total income is
below threshold limit. In such case, deductor shall
not deduct TDS on payments made to such
Individual or HUF. The said amendment is effective
from 01st
June 2017.
Increase in threshold limit for maintenance of books
of accounts in case of Individual and HUF
• Limit of Turnover/Gross Receipts and Income for
maintenance of Books of Account by Individual or
HUF u/s 44AA increased to Rs. 25 Lakh and Rs. 2.5
Lakh respectively from existing limit of Rs. 10 Lakh
and Rs. 1.2 Lakh.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“We commend the focus on growing
the digital footprint in the country;
enhancing digital infrastructure,
capping cash transactions,
reducing cash donations, using
Aadhaar Pay to enable more digital
payments are significant
measures.”
Kunal Bahl (CEO, Snapdeal)
18. 18
DIRECT TAXATION
Increase in turnover limit for Tax Audit u/s 44AB for
persons paying tax on presumptive basis
• Section 44AB proposed to be amended to increase
turnover limit for applicability of tax audit for
persons opting for presumptive taxations scheme
u/s 44AD from Rs. 1 crore to Rs. 2 crore to align the
same with the turnover limit for applicability of
presumptive taxation u/s 44AD.
Removal of deduction u/s 80CCG
• The deduction available to Resident Individual for
investment made in listed equity shares as per
scheme by Central Govt. is removed w.e.f AY 2018-
19;
• All resident individual who have availed this
exemption by AY 2017-18 shall be allowed this
deduction.
Restriction on set off of loss from House property
• A new sub section (3A) has been inserted in Section
71, wherein the set off of losses of house property
during the year against any other head of income
has been restricted to Rs. 2 lakhs only;
• However, the same can be c/f and set off from
House Property Income in subsequent years upto
8 AY immediately succeeding the AY in which loss
was first computed.
Tax exemption to partial withdrawal from National
Pension System (NPS)
• A new sub section (12B) has been inserted in
Section 10 to provide exemption on partial
withdrawal by an employee in accordance with
terms and conditions specified under Pension Fund
Regulatory and Development Authority, 2013 and
regulations made there under;
• The said exemption is available on withdrawal
upto 25% of contribution made by employee.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
19. 19
DIRECT TAXATION
NPS Deduction u/s 80CCD for Self Employed
Individual
• In case of self-employed individual, deduction u/s
80CCD w.r.t. NPS has been increased to 20% of
Gross Total Income as against 10% of Gross Total
Income in earlier years.
Presumptive Taxation u/s 44AD – Incentive for going
Cashless
• Deemed income rate of 8% on turnover/gross
receipts reduced to 6% for payments received by
an account payee cheque or account payee draft
or use of electronic clearance system through a
bank account. However, for payments received in
cash, the existing rate of 8% will continue.
Amendment applicable w.e.f. AY 2017-18
Conversion of Preference Shares to Equity Shares
exempt
• Section 47 proposed to be amended to provide
that “conversion of preference shares of a
company into its equity shares” will not be treated
as transfer. Consequential amendments are also
proposed in section 49 and section 2(42A) in
respect of cost of acquisition and period of holding.
Refund allowed in case of scrutiny
• A proviso to sub-section (1D) to section 143
inserted to provide that processing of return and
issuance of refunds can be made even if the case is
selected for the scrutiny. Earlier, no return can be
processed after the issuance of notice for scrutiny.
Amendment applicable for return filed on or after
1st Apr 2017.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
20. 20
DIRECT TAXATION
Sale of Share -FMV deemed as consideration in
certain cases
• New Section 50CA inserted in line of section 50C to
provide that in case of transfer of unquoted equity
shares where the Fair Market Value determined in
the prescribed manner is less than the
consideration received, such Fair Market Value
shall be the deemed value of consideration for the
purpose of computation of capital gains u/s 48.
• Methods for determination of FMV to be
prescribed.
Expanding the scope of long term bonds under 54EC
• Section 54EC is proposed to be amended to widen
its scope to investment in any bond redeemable
after three years which shall be notified by the
Central Government in this behalf. At present
bonds issued by NHAI and REC only covered.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
21. 21
DIRECT TAXATION
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
CORPORATE TAXATION
Reduction in tax rate for MSME Companies
• In case total turnover or gross receipts of domestic
company for FY 2015-16 does not exceed Rs. 50
crore, then, rate of tax shall be 25%.
Increase in deduction of provision for bad and
doubtful debts for Banks
• Allowance of deduction for provision for bad and
doubtful debts u/s 36(viia)(a) increased to 8.5% of
total income from existing rate of 7.5%.
Lower TDS rate u/s 194J for call centres
• Rate of TDS has been reduced to 2% from existing
rate of 10% u/s 194J in respect of payments
received or credited to payee, being a person
engaged only in business of operation of call
centre.
Extension of scope of section 43B to Co-operative
Banks
• Section 43B proposed to be amended to provide
that interest payable to the co-operative banks
other than a “primary agricultural credit society”
or a “primary co-operative agricultural and rural
development bank” shall be allowed only if it is
actually paid on or before the due date of
furnishing of return of income u/s 139(1).
Taxation of Carbon Credits
• New section 115BBG proposed to be inserted to
provide income from transfer of carbon credits
shall be taxable at the rate of ten per cent and no
expenditure or allowance in respect of such
income shall be allowed.
“The reduction of corporate tax for
MSMEs is a welcome move and will
boost the economic growth”
- Anand Maheshwari
(President, Microsoft
India)
22. 22
DIRECT TAXATION
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
Notional Income on House property held as stock in
trade beyond 1 year
• Section 23 is proposed to be amended by inserting
subsection (5) to provide that where the property
consisting of any building and land appurtenant
thereto is held as stock -in-trade and the property
or any part of the property is not let during the
whole or any part of the previous year, the annual
value of such property or part of the property, for
the period up to one year from the end of the
financial year in which the certificate of
completion of construction of the property is
obtained from the competent authority, shall be
taken to be nil. After such 1 yr., Annual Value of
such house property will be taxable.
Carry forward of losses by Startups
• In order to facilitate ease of doing business and to
promote start up India, it is proposed to amend
section 79 of the Act to provide that where a
change in shareholding has taken place in a
previous year in the case of a company being an
eligible start-up, the loss incurred in any year prior
to the previous year shall be carried forward and
set off against the income of the previous year, if,
all the shareholders of such company which held
shares carrying voting power on the last day of the
year or years in which the loss was incurred, being
the loss incurred during the period of seven years
beginning from the year in which such company is
incorporated, continue to hold those shares on the
last day of such previous year.
Extending the period for claiming deduction by start-
ups
• In view the fact that start-ups may take time to
derive profit out of their business, it is proposed to
provide that deduction u/s 80-IAC can be claimed
by an eligible start-up for any three consecutive
assessment years out of seven years
23. 23
DIRECT TAXATION
beginning from the year in which such eligible
start-up is incorporated instead of 5 years at
present.
C/f of MAT & AMT credit extended from 10 years to
15 years
• With a view to provide relief to the assessees
paying MAT and AMT, it is proposed to amend
section 115JAA & 115JB to provide that the tax
credit determined under these sections can be c/f
to 15 AY immediately succeeding the AY in which
such tax credit becomes allowable.
Disallowance of depreciation and capital
expenditure under section 35AD on cash payment
• In order to discourage cash transactions even for
capital expenditure, it is proposed to amend the
provisions of section 43 to provide that where an
assessee incurs any expenditure for acquisition of
any asset in respect which a payment or aggregate
of payments made to a person in a day, otherwise
than by an account payee cheque drawn on a bank
or account payee bank draft or use of electronic
clearing system through a bank account, exceeds
Rs 10,000, such expenditure shall be ignored for
the purposes of determination of actual cost of
such asset. Consequently depreciation on such
portion of the cost will be lost.
Similar amendment proposed to be made in
Section 35AD for non-allowance of cost of the
asset purchased in cash exceeding Rs 10,000/-
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“Profit-linked deduction for startups
extended to three of seven years is a good
move. We were hoping for MAT to go away
but its extension up to 15 years is still
satisfactory.”
Saurabh Srivastav (Co-
founder, Indian Angel
Network)
24. 24
DIRECT TAXATION
Measures to promote Affordable Housing
• Amendment proposed in section 80-IBA
(deduction for promoting Affordable Housing) to
make it more workable. Instead of built up area of
30 and 60 sq.mtr, the carpet area of 30 and 60
sq.mtr. will be counted. Also the 30 sq.mtr. limit
will apply only in case of municipal limits of 4
metropolitan cities while for the rest of the country
including in the peripheral areas of metros, limit of
60 sq.mtr will apply. The scheme was to be
completed in 3 years after commencement has
been now extended to 5 years.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
25. 25
DIRECT TAXATION
INTERNATIONAL TAXATION
Extension of eligible period of concessional tax rate
on interest on External Commercial Borrowing,
Extension of benefit to Rupee Denominated Bonds
u/s 194LC and on Interest u/s 194LD
• It is proposed to amend section 194LC to provide
that the concessional rate of 5% TDS on interest
payment on ECB u/s 194LC will now be available in
respect of borrowings made before the 1st July,
2020 as against existing time line of 1st July, 2017
Further, the above benefit of lower withholding
tax u/s 194LC has also been extended to Rupee
Denominated Bonds.
Similar amendment in section 194LD to extend
benefit of lower withholding tax of 5% on interest
payable to FIIs and QFIs on their investments in
Government securities and rupee denominated
corporate bonds before 1st July, 2020 as against
existing time line of 1st July, 2017
Capital Gain exemption to Rupee Denominated
Bonds
• With a view to facilitate transfer of Rupee
Denominated Bonds from non-resident to non-
resident, it is proposed to amend section 47 so as
to provide that any transfer of capital asset, being
rupee denominated bond of Indian company
issued outside India, by a non- resident to another
non- resident shall not be regarded as transfer.
Exemption on leftover stock of crude oil
• It is proposed to insert a new clause (48B) in
section 10 so as to provide that any income
accruing or arising to a foreign company on
account of sale of leftover stock of crude oil, if any,
from a facility in India after the expiry of an
agreement referred to in Sec 10(48A) shall also be
exempt subject to such conditions as may be
notified by the Central Government.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
““From the real estate sector perspective, the
“Housing for all by 2022” initiative got a
further boost through the coronation of
Infrastructure status to the affordable housing
segment. This will help lower the cost of
borrowing, provide easier access to foreign
funds like ECBs.”
Kamal Khetan (Chairman
and Managing Director,
Sunteck Realty)
26. 26
DIRECT TAXATION
Clarity relating to Indirect transfer provisions with
respect to FPIs
• Section 9 is proposed to be amended to clarify that
Investments held directly or indirectly by Foreign
Portfolio Investor - Category I or Category II are
excluded from indirect transfer provisions
retrospective w.e.f. 1 Apr 2012 i.e. AY 2012-13
Clarification with regard to interpretation of 'terms'
in DTAA/ Other agreements entered into u/s 90 and
90A
• With a view to provide clarity and reduce
protracted litigation, sections 90 and 90A are
proposed to be amended, to provide that where
any 'term' used in a DTAA, is defined under the
DTAA, the said term shall be assigned the meaning
as provided in the said DTAA. Where the term is
not defined in DTAA, but is defined in the Act, it
shall be assigned the meaning as per the definition
in the Act or any explanation issued by the Central
Government.
Cost of acquisition of shares held by demerged
company
• Section 49 proposed to be amended to provide
that cost of acquisition of the shares of Indian
company referred to in Sec. 47(vic) in the hands of
the resulting foreign company shall be the same as
it was in the hands of demerged foreign company.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
27. 27
DIRECT TAXATION
Enabling credit of Foreign Tax paid in cases of dispute
• Sec 155 proposed to be amended to empower the
Assessing Officer to pass a rectification order u/s
154 to grant consequential relief for Foreign tax
credit on payment of disputed tax abroad and
submission of related evidences.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
28. 28
DIRECT TAXATION
TRANSFER PRICING
CAP on deduction of Interest paid to Foreign
Associated Enterprises (AEs)
• To address thin Capitalisation (in line with BEPS
Action Plan 4), a new Section 94B proposed to be
introduced we.f. FY 2017-18, which proposes to
restrict deduction towards interest paid to a non-
resident AE upto 30% of EBITDA. Payment of
interest exceeding INR 1 Crore by Indian Co/ Indian
PE of foreign entity only to be covered. Banks and
insurance company payers excluded.
Debt shall be deemed to be treated as issued by AE
if AE provides an implicit or explicit guarantee to
the lender or the AE deposits a corresponding and
matching amount of funds with the lender.
Interest disallowed as per above provision is
allowed to be carried forward to 8 AYs to be
adjusted against income under head PGBP to the
extent of maximum allowable interest
expenditure.
Secondary TP adjustments in certain cases (TP)
• New section 92CE to be inserted to provide for
secondary adjustments, to align with OECD TP
Guidelines & international best practices.
"Secondary adjustment" is an adjustment in books
of accounts of Assessee and its AE to reflect that
the actual allocation of profits between assessee
and its AE are consistent with transfer price
determined as a result of primary adjustment,
thereby removing the in balance between cash
account and actual profit of the assessee.
Assessee shall be required to carry out secondary
adjustment in cases where a primary adjustment
exceeding INR 1 Crore to transfer price:
o has been made suomotu by the assessee
in his return of income; or
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
29. 29
DIRECT TAXATION
o has been made by AO and accepted by
assessee; or
o is determined by advance pricing
agreement (APA) entered into by assesse
u/s 92CC; or;
o is made as per the safe harbour rules
framed u/s 92CB; or
o is arising as a result of resolution of an
assessment by way of mutual agreement
procedure (MAP) under agreement
entered into u/s 90 / 90A
Where primary adjustment results in an increase in
total income or reduction in loss of assessee, the
excess money available with its AE, if not
repatriated to India within prescribed time, shall
be deemed to be an advance made by assessee to
such AE and the interest on such advance shall be
computed as income of assessee, in the prescribed
manner.
Not to apply where Primary adjustment is made in
respect of period prior to AY 2017-18.
Domestic Transfer Pricing scope restricted
• To reduce compliance burden, scope of Domestic
TP is proposed to be restricted u/s 92BA. DTP not
to apply on section 40A(2)(b) transactions w.e.f 1
April 2017 i.e. AY 2017-18 & onwards. Now, DTP
provisions will only apply to intercompany
transactions if one or both the parties are involved
in activities eligible for tax holidays.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
30. 30
DIRECT TAXATION
ASSESSMENT, LITIGATION AND OTHERS
Rationalization in time limit for completion of
assessment, reassessment and re-computation
• Following amendments have been brought in
Section 153:
o Time limit for making assessment u/s 143
or 144 have been reduced to 18 months
for assessment related to AY 2018-19 and
12 months for assessment related to AY
2019-20 and onwards;
o Time limit for making reassessment u/s
147 shall be reduced to 12 months from
the end of financial year in which notice
u/s 148 is served, for notices served u/s
148 on or after 01st April 2019;
o Time limit for making fresh assessment in
pursuance of order passed or received in
financial year 2019-20 and onwards u/s
254 or 263 or 264 shall be 12 months from
end of financial year in which order is
received.
Incentives for Investment in immovable property
(Period of Holding reduced to 2 years)
• With a view to promote the real-estate sector and
to make it more attractive for investment, it is
proposed to amend section 2(42A) of the Act so as
to reduce the period of holding from the existing
36 months to 24 months in case of immovable
property, being land or building or both, to qualify
as long term capital asset.
Shifting of base year from 1981 to 2001 for Fair
Market Value and Indexation of capital asset
• The base year for indexation and consideration of
FMV is proposed to be changed from 1.4.1981 to
1.4.2001 for all classes of assets including
immovable property by making amendments in
section 55 & 48.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“Capital Gain on Joint Development
Agreement to be taxed only at product
launch, one year tax exemption from
national rental income from unsold
inventory and reduction of Long Term
Capital Gain tax period from 3 – 2 years
provide respite to investors/developers of
real estate.
Gaurav Gupta (Director,
Omkar Realters)
31. 31
DIRECT TAXATION
Measures to discourage cash transactions
• Expenditure in cash:
o Amendment proposed in Section 40A to
alter the maximum permissible
expenditure in cash from existing limit of
Rs 20,000 to Rs 10,000.
• Receipt/sales in cash:
o To curb black money, it is proposed to
insert Sec 269ST to provide that no person
shall receive an amount of three lakh
rupees or more otherwise than by A/c
payee cheque/ bank draft/ electronic
payment. Contravention of 269ST will
attract penalty u/s 271DA equivalent to
the amount of such receipt.
o Above limit of 3 lakhs is to be considered
in aggregate from a person in a
day;
in respect of a single transaction;
or
in respect of transactions relating
to one event or occasion from a
person,
o It is also proposed to consequentially
amend the provisions of section 206C to
omit the provision relating to tax
collection atsource at the rate of one per
cent of sale consideration on cash sale of
jewellery exceeding five lakh rupees as the
same becomes redundant after
introduction of section 269ST
These amendments will take effect from
1st April, 2017.
Reducing time for filing revised return
• Under Section 139(5), time limit for filing the
revised return has been reduced to end of relevant
assessment year or before completion of
assessment, whichever is earlier as against 1 year
from the end of the assessment year as per earlier
provisions.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
32. 32
DIRECT TAXATION
Fee for delayed filing of return
• A new Section 234F shall be introduced to levy fee
for late filing of ITR. It shall be levied as follows:
o If total income is less than Rs. 5 lakhs, fee
shall not exceed Rs. 1,000;
o If income is more than Rs. 5 lakhs, if return
is filed after due date but before 31
December, fee shall be Rs. 5,000
o In any other case, fee is Rs. 10,000
• The same shall be paid before filling ITR and same
shall be considered for computation u/s 143(1)
• Consequently, penalty u/s 271F proposed to be
removed;
Interest on refund to deductor
• As per new sub section (1B) inserted in Section
244A, if a deductor is entitled to refund, then, in
addition to said refund, deductor shall be entitled
to interest @ 0.5% per month or part of the month;
The said amendment shall apply from AY 2017-18
and subsequent assessment year.
Penalty on professionals for furnishing incorrect
information in statutory report or certificate
• A new Section 271J has been inserted wherein it is
provided that if an accountant or merchant banker
or registered valuer furnishes incorrect
information in a report or certificate under any
provisions of Act or rules, then AO or CIT(A) may
direct him to pay a sum by way of penalty of Rs.
10,000 for each such report or certificate;
• Further Section 273B has been amended to
provide that such penalty shall not be levied if
there was a reasonable cause for such failure;
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
33. 33
DIRECT TAXATION
• The said amendment shall apply from 01st April
2017.
Quoting of PAN made mandatory in TCS transactions
• A new Section 206CC has been inserted to provide
mandatory quoting of PAN in all TCS transactions
taxable under Chapter XVII BB;
• In case PAN is not quoted or wrongly quoted,
person collecting TCS shall collect tax at twice the
rate specified in respective section or 5%,
whichever is higher;
• The said section shall not apply to non resident
who does not have Permanent Establishment (PE)
in India;
• The said amendment is effective from 01st
April
2017.
Rationalization of Section 211 and Section 234C
relating to Advance tax
• Any professional paying tax on presumptive basis
under Section 44ADA shall be liable to pay advance
tax in one installment before 15th March only and
not in 4 installment;
• Further, if the there is a shortfall in advance tax
payment due to dividend taxable u/s 115BBDA,
then interest u/s 234C shall not be levied.
• The said amendment shall apply from AY 2017-18
and subsequent assessment year.
Transparency in funding of political parties
• It is proposed to amend the provisions of section
13A to provide for additional conditions for
availing the benefit of the said section by political
parties:
o No donations of Rs.2000/- or more in cash.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
34. 34
DIRECT TAXATION
o Political party furnished a return of
incomeon or before the due date under
section 139.
Further, it is proposed to amend the said section to
provide thatthe political parties shall not be
required to furnish the name and address of the
donors who contribute by way of electoral bond.
An amendment is being proposed to the Reserve
Bank of India Act to enable the issuance of
electoral bonds. A donor could purchase bonds
from authorised banks against cheque and digital
payments only.
Merging of AAR
• Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) for Income-Tax
to be merged with AAR for Customs, Central Excise
and Service Tax; and create common AAR.
Extension of power of CBDT in certain cases
• It is proposed to insert reference of sections 271C
and 271CA which deals with levy of penalty for
non-deduction of tax, in the Section 119 so as to
empower the Board to issue directions or
instructions in respect of the said sections also.
Disallowance of expenses under IOS
• Section 58 amended so as to provide that
provisions of section 40(a)(ia)also apply in case of
“Income under head Other Sources”, Therefore,
disallowance shall be made in respect of an
expenditure incurred against “income from other
sources” unless tax has been deducted thereon at
applicable rates. Section 40(a)(iia) has already
been inserted in section 58 of the Act.
Consolidation of mutual fund exempt
• It is proposed to provide that in case of unit in the
consolidated plan of a mutual fund scheme
received in lieu of unit in the consolidating plan,
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
35. 35
DIRECT TAXATION
the actual cost and the period of holding shall be
the cost and the period of holding of the unit in the
consolidating plan.
Special provisions for computation of capital gains in
case of joint development agreement
• Under the existing provisions of section 45, capital
gain is chargeable to tax in the year in which
transfer takes place except in certain cases. With a
view to minimise the genuine hardship which the
owner of land may face in paying capital gains tax
in the year of transfer, it is proposed to insert a
new sub-section (5A) in section 45 so as to provide
that in case of an assessee being individual or
Hindu undivided family, who enters into a
specified agreement for development of a project,
the capital gains shall be chargeable to income-tax
as income of the previous year in which the
certificate of completion for the whole or part of
the project is issued by the competent authority.
It is further proposed to provide that the stamp
duty value of his share, being land or building or
both, in the project on the date of issuing of said
certificate of completion as increased by any
monetary consideration received, if any, shall be
deemed to be the full value of the consideration
received or accruing as a result of the transfer of
the capital asset.
Consequential amendment is proposed in section
49 so as to provide that the cost of acquisition of
the share in the project being land or building or
both, in the hands of the land owner shall be the
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
“Key reforms being the infrastructure
status for Affordable Housing and lowering
the tenure for long term capital gains tax
to 2 years.”
Ravindra Pai (MD,
Century Real Estate)
36. 36
DIRECT TAXATION
amount which is deemed as full value of
consideration under the said proposed provision.
STT paid on purchase compulsory u/s 10(38)
• Section 10(38) is proposed to amend to provide
that exemption under this section for income
arising on transfer of equity share acquired or on
after 1st day of October, 2004 shall be available
only if the acquisition of share is chargeable to
Securities Transactions Tax under Chapter VII of
the Finance (No 2) Act, 2004. However, to protect
the exemption for genuine cases where the
Securities Transactions Tax could not have been
paid like acquisition of share in IPO, FPO, bonus or
right issue by a listed company acquisition by non-
resident in accordance with FDI policy of the
Government etc., it is also proposed to notify
transfers for which the condition of chargeability
to Securities Transactions Tax on acquisition shall
not be applicable.
Widening scope of Income from other sources
• The anti-abuse provisions of section 56(2) for
receipt of money or property without
consideration or inadequate consideration are
applicable only to Individuals, HUF and in some
specific cases, to firms and companies.
In order to prevent the practice of receiving the
sum of money or the property without
consideration or for inadequate consideration, it is
proposed to insert a new clause (x) in sub-section
(2) of section 56 so as to provide that receipt of the
sum of money or the property by any person
without consideration or for inadequate
consideration in excess of Rs. 50,000 shall be
chargeable to tax in the hands of the recipient
under the head "Income from other sources". It is
also proposed to widen the scope of existing
exceptions by including the receipt by certain
trusts or institutions and receipt by way of certain
transfers not regarded as transfer under section
47.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
37. 37
DIRECT TAXATION
Consequential amendment is also proposed in
section 49 for determination of cost of acquisition.
Clarificatory amendment in Section 12A
• It shall be required to obtain fresh registration by
making an application within a period of thirty days
in case of modifications of the objects which do not
conform to the conditions of registration.
• Now, it is mandatory for claiming exemption u/s
12A, to file return of income on or before the due
date prescribed u/s 139.
Extension of power to survey
• The scope of provisions of section 133A of the
Income-tax Act widened so as to include any place
at which activity for charitable purpose is carried
on.
Section 197(C) omitted
• Section 197(C) of the Finance Act, 2016 proposed
to be omitted which provided for assessment of
undisclosed income relating to any period prior to
commencement of the Income Declaration
Scheme, 2016.
Reasons to search not to be disclosed
• Retrospective amendment in section 132 and
132A, Reasons to believe as recorded by the
income-tax authority authorising a search
operation or a requisition of books of account or
asset, shall not be disclosed to any person,
authority or appellate tribunal.
Extension of search assessment
• Section 153A and 153C amended to provide that in
case of tangible evidence is found during the
search, the Assessing Officer can assess income
beyond period of six years upto ten years
preceding the year in which search took place.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
38. 38
DIRECT TAXATION
However, following conditions needs to be
fulfilled:
o The Assessing Officer has in his possession
books of accounts or other documents or
evidence which reveal that the income
which has escaped assessment amounts to
or is likely to amount to fifty lakh rupees or
more in one year or in aggregate in the
relevant four assessment years falling
beyond the sixth year.
o Such income escaping assessment is
represented in the form of asset.
o The income escaping assessment or part
thereof relates to such year or years.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
39. 39
INDIRECT TAXATION
• Passing of 122nd
Constitutional Amendment Bill
related to Goods and Service Tax and
Demonetisation were highlighted as the two
tectonic events in the past year.
• The Finance Minister, Shri Arun Jaitley, proposed
not to make many changes in current regime of
Excise & Service Tax because the same are to be
replaced by GST soon.
• Assuring to bring in GST at the scheduled time, he
said “Centre, through the Central Board of Excise
& Customs, shall continue to strive to achieve the
goal of implementation of GST as per schedule
without compromising the spirit of co-operative
federalism. Implementation of GST is likely to bring
more taxes both to Central and State Governments
because of widening of tax net. I have preferred
not to make many changes in current regime of
Excise & Service Tax because the same are to be
replaced by GST soon.”
• GST Council has finalized its recommendations on
almost all the issues based on consensus and after
spirited debate and discussions. The preparation of
IT system for GST is also on schedule. The
government intends to start its extensive reach-
out efforts to trade and industry for GST from 1st
April, 2017 to make them aware of the new
taxation system.
• Limited changes have been made due to transition
of GST in FY 2017-18. The list of key changes are
attached herewith as ‘Annexure I’.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
40. 40
Commodity
Rate of Duty
From To
I. Incentivizing domestic value addition, ‘Make in India’
A. Reduction in Customs duty on inputs and raw materials to reduce costs
Mineral fuels and Mineral oils
1 Liquefied Natural Gas BCD – 5%
BCD –
2.5%
2 Metals
3 Nickel BCD – 2.5% BCD – Nil
Finished Leather
4
Vegetable tanning extracts, namely, Wattle
extract and Myrobalan fruit extract
BCD – 7.5%
BCD –
2.5%
Capital Goods
5
Ball screws, linear motion guides and CNC
systems for use in the manufacture of CNC
machine tools, subject to actual user
Condition
Ball screws
and liner
motion guides
BCD - 7.5 %
CNC system
BCD - 10%
BCD –
2.5%
Renewable Energy
6 All items of machinery required for fuel cell
based power generating systems to be set
up in the country or for demonstration
purposes, subject to certain specified
Conditions
BCD – 10%
/7.5%
CVD – 12.5%
BCD – 5%
CVD – 6%
7 All items of machinery required for balance
of systems operating on biogas/ bio-
methane/ by-product hydrogen, subject to
certain specified conditions
BCD – 10%
/7.5%
CVD – 12.5%
BCD – 5%
CVD – 6%
Miscellaneous
8 All parts for use in the manufacture of LED
lights or fixtures, including LED lamps,
subject to actual user condition
Applicable
BCD, CVD
BCD – 5%
CVD – 6%
9 All inputs for use in the manufacture of LED
Driver and MCPCB for LED lights or fixtures,
including LED lamps, subject to actual user
Condition
Applicable
BCD
5%
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot ANNEXURES
ANNEXURE I: Proposals involving change in Duty/Tax Rates - CUSTOMS
41. 41
Commodity
Rate of Duty
From To
B.
Changes in Customs and Excise / CV duty to address the problem of duty inversions in
certain sectors
Textiles
13
Nylon mono filament yarn for use in
monofilament long line system for Tuna fishing,
subject to certain specified Conditions
BCD – 7.5% BCD – 5%
Automobiles
17
Clay 2 Powder (Alumax) for use in ceramic substrate
for catalytic convertors, subject to actual user
condition
BCD – 7.5% BCD – 5%
C. Changes in Customs duty to provide adequate protection to domestic industry
Food Processing
22 Cashew nut, roasted, salted or roasted and Salted BCD – 30%
BCD –
45%
Electronics / Hardware
23
Populated Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs) for use in
the manufacture of mobile phones, subject to
actual user condition
SAD – Nil SAD – 2%
Miscellaneous
24 RO membrane element for household type Filters BCD – 7.5%
BCD –
10%
D.
Promotion of cashless transactions and promote domestic manufacturing of devices
used therefor
25
a) Miniaturized POS card reader for m-POS (not
including mobile phones or tablet (not including
mobile phones or tablet computer),
b) Micro ATM as per standards version 1.5.1,
c) Finger Print Reader / Scanner, and
d) Iris Scanner
Applicable
BCD, CVD
SAD
BCD – Nil
CVD – Nil
SAD – Nil
II. Imposition of export duty to conserve domestic resources
27 Other aluminium ores, including laterite Nil 15%
III. Improving ease of doing business and Export Promotion
28
De-minimise customs duties exemption limit for
goods imported through parcels, packets and
letters
Duty
payable not
exceeding
Rs.100 per
consignmen
t
CIF value
not
exceeding
Rs.100 per
consignm
ent
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
42. 42
EXCISE
Commodity
Rate of Duty
From To
I. Public Health
A. Tobacco and Tobacco Products
1 Cigar and cheroots, Cigarillos
12.5% or Rs.3,755
per thousand,
whichever is higher
12.5% or
Rs.4006
per
thousand,
whichever
is higher
II.
Promotion of cashless transactions and promote
domestic manufacturing of devices used therefore
2
a) Miniaturized POS card Reader for m-POS (
not including mobile phones or tablet
computers),
Applicable duty
b) micro ATM as per standards version 1.5.1,
c) Finger Print Reader / Scanner, and
d) Iris Scanner
Note: " Basic Excise Duty" means the excise duty set forth in the First Schedule to the
Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985.
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
43. 43
SERVICE TAX
S No. Changes Existing Proposed
A. Relief to the armed forces of the Union from service tax
1. Services provided or agreed to be provided by the by way of life
insurance to members of the Army, Navy and Air Force under the
Group Insurance Schemes of the Central Government is being
exempted from service tax from 10th September, 2004 (the date
when the services of life insurance became taxable).
14% Nil
B. Dispute resolution, certainty of taxation and avoidance of litigation
1. Notification No. 41/2016-ST dated 22.09.2016, which has
exempted from service tax, one time upfront amount (called as
premium, salami, cost, price, development charges or by whatever
name) payable for grant of long-term lease of industrial
plots (30 years or more) by State Government industrial
development corporations/undertakings to industrial units, is
proposed to be made effective from 1.6.2007 (the date when the
services of Renting of immovable property became taxable).
14% Nil
2. Rule 2A of the Service Tax (Determination of Value) Rules, 2006 is
proposed to be amended from 01.07.2010 so as to make it clear
that value of service portion in execution of works contract
involving transfer of goods and land or undivided share of land, as
the case may be, shall not include value of property in such land or
undivided share of Land.
4.20% 4.20%
C. Promotion of Regional Connectivity Scheme of Ministry of Civil Aviation
1. Under the Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS), exemption from
service tax is being provided in respect of the amount of viability gap
funding (VGF) payable to the airline operator for providing the
services of transport of passengers by air, embarking from or
terminating in a Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS) airport, for a
period of one year from the date of commencement of
operations of the Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS) airport as
notified by Ministry of Civil Aviation.
14% Nil
D. Rationalization Measures
1. The exemption in respect of services provided by Indian Institutes of
Management (IIMs) by way of two year full time residential Post
Graduate Programmes (PGP) in Management for the Post
Graduate Diploma in Management (PGDM), to which admissions
are made on the basis of the Common Admission Test (CAT),
conducted by IIMs, is being extended to include non-residential
programmes.
14% Nil
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
44. 44
2. Explanation-I (e) to Rule 6 of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 is being
amended so as to exclude banks and financial institutions including
non-banking financial companies engaged in providing services by
way of extending deposits, loans or advances from its ambit.
3. The Negative List entry in respect of “services by way of carrying out
any process amounting to manufacture or production of goods
excluding alcoholic liquor for human consumption”, in the
Finance Act, 1994, is proposed to be omitted and instead placed in
the exemption notification. Consequently, clause (40) of section 65B
of the Finance Act, which defines ‘process amounting to
manufacture’ is also proposed to be omitted and instead placed in
the exemption notification.
Nil Nil
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
45. 45
Dewan P.N.
Chopra & Co.
UnionBudget2017-18
–ASnapshot
DISCLAIMER
This document has been prepared in summary form by Dewan P. N. Chopra & Co., Chartered Accountants, from
sources believed to be reliable. The information contained herein is intended only for the person to whom it is
sent. While the information is believed to be accurate to the best of our knowledge, we do not make any
representations or warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of such information.
Recipients should conduct and rely upon their own examination, investigation and analysis and are advised to
seek their own professional advice. The information and data contained herein is not a substitute for the
recipient’s independent evaluation and analysis. This document is not an offer, invitation, advice or solicitation
of any kind. We accept no responsibility for any errors it may contain, whether caused by negligence or
otherwise or for any loss, howsoever caused or sustained, by the person who relies on it.
CONTACT US
Dewan P. N. Chopra & Co.
Chartered Accountants
Head Office Corporate Offices
57-H, Connaught Circus D-295, Defence Colony,
New Delhi (India)-110001 New Delhi (India)-110024
Phones: +91-11-23321418/2359 Phones: +91-11-24645891/92/93
Email: dpnc@dpncindia.com
D-203, Defence Colony,
New Delhi (India)-110024
Phones: +91-11-24645897/40526860
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