Slippery slope

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| The idea that tax policy should be designed to address specific social or economic objectives is now passe""which is one reason why the flat tax has gained so much momentum as an idea in so many countries. Indeed, the finance minister favouring differential excise duties sits uneasily in a Budget that has focused attention as never before on the problem created by tax exemptions. The tax-expenditure statement that Mr Chidambaram has introduced for the first time, shows that the value of excise exemptions was around Rs 30,000 crore in 2004-05, while those on customs added up to another Rs 60,000 crore. As far back as the 1960s, the then finance minister T.T.Krishnamachari had confessed that tax proposals were not based on economic logic as much as on which business lobby was weakest or would protest the least at a new impost. Surely, it is time to move on from that kind of budgeting logic. |
| Apart from the cost that such exemptions entail in terms of revenue foregone, it also makes enforcement more difficult. How are excise inspectors to check, to use an example from the latest Budget proposals, if footwear, which is claiming excise exemption, actually retails at under Rs 250? This involves setting up an elaborate surveillance structure to ensure that prices printed at the factory are indeed the ones at which the ultimate consumer gets the product"" the famous ITC tax evasion case was founded on the view that while the company took advantage of lower excise duties by declaring a lower retail price, the cigarettes were in fact being sold at a higher price. The wise course for a finance minister looking at a unified goods and service tax is to stick to a single rate of excise duty. This would in fact make the finance minister's job easier since he would have an easy and standard response to all requests for special consideration. |
First Published: Mar 07 2006 | 12:00 AM IST