Exclusive: India eyes spending cuts as glitches in new
tax hit revenue
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[September 18, 2017]
By Manoj Kumar
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India could be forced
to cut spending on key infrastructure such as railways and highways as
lower-than-expected tax collections and sluggish growth have upset the
government's budget calculations, two finance ministry officials said.
Tax receipts were about $7.8 billion in July - a little over half the
monthly target - mostly because millions of firms failed to comply with
the new Goods and Services Tax (GST) system that harmonizes all state
and federal sales taxes but is still a work in progress.
The big worry is that economic growth, which slipped to a three-year low
in the last quarter, could take a further hit if the public spending
that largely underpinned expansion were to be slashed.
"There is a concern over lower tax collections," a senior finance
ministry official said.
The revenue shortfall could be at least 800 billion rupees ($12.5
billion) if the current trend continues until the end of the year, a
second official said, forcing a re-think in government spending.
He said receipts from individual and corporate income tax may slightly
overshoot the target of 9.8 trillion rupees ($152.8 billion) for the
whole year, partly due to a crackdown on tax evaders. And in coming
months, GST collections may pick up.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity.
Without spending cuts, the second official said, the fiscal deficit
could slip to 3.5 percent of GDP, from the target of 3.2 percent that
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has set for 2017/18.
GST "CHAOS AND PANDEMONIUM"
The main problem has been the introduction of the GST, billed as India's
biggest tax reform in 70 years.
Ambiguous rules, an onerous return filing system and glitches with its
IT back-end have made doing business far more complicated for many
companies. Frequent changes in tax rates after the GST's launch have
heightened business uncertainty, resulting in many firms failing to
register for the new tax.
Manpreet Singh Badal, finance minister of the northern state of Punjab,
told Reuters the new tax was launched in a "hurry resulting in a lot of
chaos and pandemonium".
Punjab, for example, had suffered a revenue shortfall of about 8 billion
rupees in the first month of the July-June fiscal year, he said as the
textile, engineering goods and other small industries were hit. The
state expects to raise near 395 billion rupees ($6.17 billion) in tax in
2017/18.
Under a GST deal, the federal government has to compensate states if
their receipts fall below an annual growth of 14 percent in taxes for
the next five years.
India's GDP growth itself has slowed to 5.7 percent in the April-June
quarter from 7.9 percent a year earlier, a slowdown also partly blamed
on the introduction of the GST, adding to the pressure on the state
coffers.
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A man buys lemons at a market in Ahmedabad, India, September 12,
2017. REUTERS/Amit Dave
Dividends from state-run companies are expected to fall and a $11 billion share
sale program is slowing down.
"If the revenues remain below target, then the government could cut spending on
railways and road transport," the second finance ministry official said.
Aiming to boost growth, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley increased budgetary
allocations for the railways by one-fifth to 550 billion rupees and by 24
percent for highways development to 649 billion rupees this fiscal year from a
year ago.
Complicating the finance ministry's budget arithmetic further, the Reserve Bank
of India announced last month that its annual surplus, a dividend transferred by
the central bank to the government each year, would be only $4.9 billion, less
than half the initial estimate, largely due to costs of Modi's shock "demonetisation"
initiative last year.
"This is an abnormal year. A shortfall in tax and non-tax revenue could give a
shock," said N.R. Bhanumurthy, an economist at the National Institute of Public
Finance and Policy, a Delhi-based think-tank funded by the finance ministry.
He said the economy was still recovering from Modi's move to withdraw 86 percent
of high value banknotes as part of a fight against graft.
TAX COLLECTIONS
A finance ministry spokesman said tax receipts were expected to improve as
problems related to the new GST system and the technology underpinning it were
tackled.
In his annual budget presented in February, finance minister Jaitley had
projected a 17 percent growth in tax collections, while estimating spending of
nearly $335.05 billion in the current fiscal year.
Jaitley also has to set aside funds for India's stressed state-run banks, which
need nearly $60 billion in extra capital to meet new international banking rules
by March 2019 according to Fitch Ratings estimates.
Balancing those demands while trying to control the fiscal deficit would involve
a cut in public spending, analysts said.
Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economist at State Bank of India <SBI.NS>, said in a
research note this month that first quarter economic growth was supported by
higher state spending but the need to rein in the fiscal deficit could force the
government to cut expenditure.
(Additional reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Alex
Richardson)
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