Thursday, February 28, 2013
India budget surprises with spending surge, wealth tax
By Malini Menon and Aradhana Aravindan
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India unveiled new taxes on the rich and large companies on Thursday to fund higher-than-expected spending for the next fiscal year, in a budget that aimed to revive growth amid the country's worst slowdown in a decade ahead of a 2014 election.
India's Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram (C) poses as he leaves his office to present the 2013/14 federal budget in New Delhi February 28, 2013. REUTERS/B Mathur |
Stocks, bond prices and the rupee all fell despite Finance Minister P. Chidambaram's vow to cut next year's fiscal deficit to 4.8 percent of GDP, which some watchers said counted on ambitious revenue assumptions given hefty spending targets.
There had been widespread expectation, fuelled in part by comments by finance ministry officials, that Chidambaram would present an austere budget in line with the spending cuts he forced on government ministries in recent months.
But the spending plan appeared to have been drawn up with a looming general election in mind, some economists said.
"With a general election not much than a year away, political pressure from within the Congress Party may well have had an influence on the make-up of the Finance Minister's budget," Credit Suisse said.
Chidambaram, a three-time finance minister seen as a candidate for prime minister in 2014, has staked his reputation on cutting swollen fiscal and current account deficits that have alarmed credit rating agencies and triggered warnings that India's sovereign bonds could be downgraded to 'junk' status. There was no immediate comment from the agencies.
"Fiscal consolidation cannot be effective only by cutting expenditure," Chidambaram said in his speech, seen as a balancing act to stave off a credit rating downgrade while meeting demands for populist spending heading into an election year.
HEFTY REVENUE GROWTH ASSUMPTIONS
Total budget expenditure will rise by an unexpectedly high 16 percent in the 2013/14 fiscal year that begins on April 1 to 16.65 trillion rupees (203 billion pounds).
Next year's fiscal deficit target is in line with expectations but assumes hefty revenue growth, including 558 billion rupees from the sale of government stakes in companies, or more than double the 240 billion rupee target for the current year, which falls short of the initial target.
"From a macro perspective, the budget is disappointing in our opinion as it lacks any expenditure control," Nomura analysts wrote.
The budget also assumes revenue of 408.5 billion rupees from telecoms sector fees, more than double what it will generate this year, with its next auction of mobile airwaves poised to flop after attracting just one bidder.
"The government may fall short of its tax and disinvestment targets and end up cutting spending closer to the end of the year to attain its fiscal deficit target," said A. Prasanna, economist at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership Ltd.
Net market borrowing of 4.84 trillion rupees for the new fiscal year met investor hopes that the figure would not top 5 trillion rupees, but the gross figure exceeded expectations.
The budget included several measures to spur investment both in markets and by corporations, including an incentive on investments in plant and machinery exceeding 1 billion rupees and extending tax breaks for small companies that grow larger, and an expansion of tax-free bonds for infrastructure.
Chidambaram has focused on winning back foreign investors unnerved by proposals of his predecessor, Pranab Mukherjee, to tax merger deals retrospectively and clamp down on tax evasion. Since September, he has implemented a spate of investor-friendly reforms, including allowing entry of foreign supermarkets.
"India, at the present juncture, does not have the choice between welcoming and spurning foreign investment. If I may be frank, foreign investment is an imperative. What we can do is to encourage foreign investment that is consistent with our economic objectives," he said.
HEY, BIG SPENDER
While the added spending included capital investment that many have said is sorely needed, including a 29 percent increase in funding for infrastructure and development, it also included a 46 percent jump in funding for development programmes in rural areas, the core voter base of the ruling Congress party.
An added surcharge on local firms with incomes of more than 100 million rupees and a 10 percent surcharge on individuals with taxable incomes topping 10 million rupees - a level of earnings currently declared by just 42,800 people - will be put in place for one year.
Dozens of corporate executives, watching a telecast at an industry event in New Delhi, exchanged nervous smiles as Chidambaram introduced the surcharge on the rich.
"In the larger scheme of things, I guess that is one way of reducing his deficit. Am I going to lose sleep over it? No," Ganesh Natarajan, CEO of IT outsourcer Zensar Technologies, said by phone from Pune, where the company is based.
Indian economic growth for the current fiscal year is on track to hit just 5 percent, nearly half its level in 2007/08.
"This country must not lose any time - India must get its act together to accelerate the tempo of growth," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a TV interview after the budget speech.
The budget also reflects the realities of a country of 1.2 billion people, many of them poor. "On the one side is the economic policy, on the other side is economic welfare. We are a developing country. The link between policy and welfare can be expressed in a few words: Opportunities, education, skills, jobs and income," Chidambaram said.
(Additional reporting by Arup Roychoudhury, Satarupa Bhattacharjya, Suvashree Dey Choudhury, Frank Jack Daniel, Annie Banerji, Matthias Williams, Anurag Kotoky, Swati Bhat, Harichandan Arakali, Devidutta Tripathy, Manoj Kumar and Rajesh Kumar Singh; Writing by Ross Colvin and Tony Munroe; Editing by John Chalmers and Alex Richardson)
Related Stories:
India's 2013/14 budget
- Four killed in freak car crash on MRR2
- Forest fire razes 40ha in Dungun
- EC mulls action against those who slandered it
- Unscheduled water disruption in Gombak and KL
- Palanivel: Special team to focus on forest, hill destruction
- Two riders in motorcycle convoy die in mishap
- Student activist Adam Adli remanded 5 days
- Forestry DG: Less than 1% of forest reserves in peninsula affected by illegal logging
- PAS gets four Selangor exco posts
- Dr Chua: Tee’s appointment to Johor exco will be discussed by MCA central committee
- Taib wants infrastructure development issues resolved
- More want English-medium schools option
- Police investigating organisers of Penang thanksgiving ceramah
- Kit Siang slams new IGP for having double standards
- Labourer charged with injuring a man during GE13 campaign period
- Adrian Cheng: updating a Hong Kong family empire for a changing China
- Wall Street Week Ahead: Correction talk gets old as rally sails along
- China April housing inflation quickens to two year high
- EU cites Chinese telecoms Huawei and ZTE for trade violations
- Yahoo to vote on $1.1 billion Tumblr buy: AllThingsD
- Dow, S&P end at records, stocks mark fourth week of gains
- CEO: Catcha Media won’t be taken private - for now
- Sarawak politically-linked stocks rally
- Jala: GST could add up to RM27b to country’s income
- Analysts say UMW Holdings’ O&G offering was widely anticipated
- Matrix Concepts’ IPO oversubscribed by 11.3 times
- Instacom wins RM200m job?
- SFSS set to be largest shareholder of Bintulu Port
- Northport buys two new quay cranes
- Bursa Malaysia closes on Friday
- Thailand's Red Shirts mark deadly crackdown
- Pakistan's Imran blames rival for killing
- Karachi voters back at polls after ballot stuffing
- Philippines waiting for Taiwan anger to cool
- Russia retrieves mice, newts from space
- 29 killed in South Sudan cattle raid
- Saudi woman creates history by scaling Everest
- Lotto fever strikes US as jackpot swells (Updated)
- Pakistani politician gunned down in Karachi
- Dozens hurt in US road accident, say reports
- Williams sweeps Azarenka aside in Rome
- World No. 3 Azarenka sets up Williams final in Rome
- Shaky start for favourites China
- Chong Wei continues to stay focused despite all the changes
- Apacs extend Chun Seang’s contract for another year
- Denmark’s Hoyer is new president of the BWF
- Indonesian coach: Individual sponsorship will revive our shuttlers’ fortunes
- Thongchai faces McDowell in Match-Play climax
- Golf: Griffin wins fog-bound SK Telecom Open
- Golf: Choi edges sizzling Nordqvist for LPGA lead
- Poulter angry with himself after World Match-Play exit
- Inconsistent and uncomfortable but Bradley still ahead of pack
- Korda holds off charging Webb to seize the lead
- McIlroy splits with management to go it alone
- Hall of Famer Venturi dies at age 82
- Security guards 'chopped up like meat' at Cheras condo
- Bring back English schools
- Be wary of banking Trojans
- Hills in Cameron Highlands ‘raped’ at an alarming rate
- Retract your statement, Guan Eng urges Zahid
- Student activist Adam Adli arrested over his remarks at May 13 forum
- Karpal tells Tunku Aziz to cease attacks on DAP
- Five men assault constable's friend at Johor police station
- Kit Siang slams new IGP for having double standards
- More want English-medium schools option
- Be wary of banking Trojans
- Bring back English schools
- My home, my school
- Security guards 'chopped up like meat' at Cheras condo
- Expert: Be very sure you need a mastectomy
- Blind man wants to raise awareness on retinal diseases
- More want English-medium schools option
- Bring back English schools
- Five men assault constable's friend at Johor police station
- Home garden talk a hit with Malaysians

