Tax Reform Agenda in India
The reform agenda for both income taxes and indirect taxes in India has aimed for a broad-based regime with low tax rates. Significant changes include:
- Reduction in the number of income tax slabs, stabilizing at three by the late 1990s.
- Reduction of incentives, with the introduction of sunset clauses for certain regimes.
- Introduction of a lower rate regime with no exemptions for corporations and individuals.
Revenue Foregone Statement
Since the 2006-07 Budget, the Government of India has published revenue foregone statements to enhance transparency and facilitate discussions on exemptions.
- The ratio of revenue foregone to total revenue collected has declined for corporate tax.
- Post-2016-17, the decline is linked to the alternative tax regime offering a lower rate without exemptions.
Corporate Taxpayer Regime Choice
As of 2022-23, 41% of reported income is under the old regime, slightly down from 43% in 2021-22.
- Despite progress, achieving a no-exemption regime requires further steps.
Personal Income Tax (PIT) Complexity
PIT has shown higher ratios of revenue foregone compared to Corporate Income Tax (CIT):
- PIT collections have surpassed CIT, indicating significant incentives' role.
- Revenue foregone ratios spiked in 2019-20 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and declined thereafter, but remained over 20% in 2023-24.
Breakdown of Revenue Foregone for Individuals
- Section 80C has been the largest contributor, though its share fell from 82% in 2013-14 to 52% in 2022-23.
- Important components include pension schemes, medical insurance, and section 87A rebates for lower tax brackets.
Options for Reforming PIT Incentives
Considering options for restructuring incentives:
- Phase out incentives over time to expand the tax base and maintain taxpayer inclusion.
- Enhance the alternative regime to make it more attractive by increasing tax benefits, reducing taxpayer numbers in the old regime.
Union Budget 2025-26 Approach
The Budget introduced significant changes in the individual income tax regime:
- Increased the effective exemption threshold from Rs 7 lakh to Rs 12 lakh.
- Individuals earning less than Rs 12 lakh pay no taxes under the new regime.
- Even those above Rs 12 lakh benefit from lower rates compared to the old regime.
The overarching question remains: how to construct a more robust income-tax regime and potentially phase out the old regime to achieve long-term stability in revenue collections.