HomeNewsBusinessMarketsBudget 2022 may not bring in any tax reforms, expected to be fiscally prudent, says Ambit

Budget 2022 may not bring in any tax reforms, expected to be fiscally prudent, says Ambit

Budget 2022 | "We expect the Centre to keep the fiscal deficit target around 6.4 percent of the GDP in FY23. This will have two major implications – the Centre's debt-GDP ratio, which increased by 1,000 bps to 64 percent in FY21, would reduce to 60 percent by the end of FY23."

January 30, 2022 / 19:34 IST
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Budget 2022
Budget 2022

Sumit Shekhar, Senior Economist and Eashaan Nair, Economist at Ambit Institutional Equities

At 17.4 percent, India's overall tax to GDP ratio in FY20 was comparable with that of many other emerging markets. Like these countries, India, too, witnessed significant growth in the tax-GDP ratio in the last 20 years due to the increasing formalisation of the economy. India's tax structure has come a long way – from 80 percent of taxes being contributed by indirect taxes in the 1980s to 46 percent between FY10 and FY19. This could be attributed to a steady rise in corporate and income tax between FY00 and FY20. But we note three recent shocks to the tax structure which would strain the Centre and states' potential tax receipts: 1) reduction of corporate tax rates, 2) constant reduction in GST rates, and 3) Centre's increased dependence on cess. While the FY23 budget may not bring in any tax reforms, we expect it to be fiscally prudent to contain the high level of government debt which increased to 91 percent in FY21.

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In FY20, the government announced a cut in corporate tax rates from 30 percent to 22 percent for existing firms and 25 percent to 15 percent for new manufacturing firms with the aim of attracting foreign investments and increasing manufacturing competitiveness in India. An immediate impact of this decision was the fall in corporate tax to GDP ratio, from 3.5 percent of GDP in FY19 to 2.7 percent in FY20. Our estimates suggest the Government lost corporate income tax worth Rs 1.5 trillion and Rs 2.23 trillion in FY20 and FY21 respectively. Despite impressive corporate tax collections in FY22YTD (Centre achieved 64 percent of budgeted target in 8 months), we expect the government to lose up to Rs 1.5 trillion (0.6 percent of GDP) of potential corporate tax collections.