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13/07/2019 - Economy

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July 13, 2019

Reviving private investment is key to achieving India's vision of a $5 trillion economy. How should taxes and revenues be balanced in this regard? Discuss.

Refer - Indian Express

Enrich the answer with other sources, if the question demands.

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IAS Parliament 5 years

KEY POINTS

Both the budget and the Economic Survey focused on revival of private investment to ensure sustained long-term growth. Thus, there is strong case for further and aggressive reduction in tax rates on the grounds of revival of investment, and helping India become a $5 trillion economy.

Balancing taxes and revenues

·        Competitiveness is affected by tax rates, interest rates, exchange rates, and labour costs.

·        In order to improve their competitiveness, countries can reduce its cost of capital, make labour more competitive.

·        Due to reforms by RBI, there has been considerable improvement in communication and a gradual lowering of policy rates, but this has also been accompanied by a more than equal lowering of inflation, that is, the real repo rate has yet to move below 2.3 per cent.

·        The sovereign bond issue will help, but not a quick acceleration in GDP growth.

·        Exchange rate change is no longer operational, labour codes are too slow to change, and monetary policy is sluggish in its operation, and impact.

·        The only real growth option for Indian policymakers — cut tax rates to internationally competitive levels.

·        Ostensibly, tax rates are need to be set at optimal level to maximise tax revenue — and tax revenue depends on both income and tax compliance.

·        Tax compliance can either be considered as more firms filing taxes or more firms revealing a closer approximation to true income.

·        Improving compliance alone can ensure greater resource mobilisation through taxation — and without increasing the tax rate (and may indeed occur if the tax rate is reduced).

·        The non-linear relationship between tax rate and tax revenue (as per cent of GDP) is revealed by the famous Laffer curve – with zero tax rates, you get zero tax revenue and with 100 per cent tax rate, you get zero tax revenue.

·        In India, we tax at 44 per cent to get 3.5 per cent of tax revenue (as percentage of GDP). Asper Laffer curve , the tax rate level at which revenue is maximised is around 23 per cent — half India’s tax level.

 

Vandana 5 years

Kindly review

IAS Parliament 5 years

Good answer. Keep writing.

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