Taxing the rich and other fantasies

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Surjit S Bhalla : Jan 23 2013, 03:01 IST
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There is noise (all puns intended) in the air about the fairness of the Indian personal tax system. And considerable appeals to morality and “sacrifice” and the Indian way about the need to tax the rich in India at a higher rate. Except for a surcharge of 3 per cent on the top tax bracket, the tax rates in India have stayed constant at 10, 20 and 30 percent for increasing income slabs — constant since P. Chidambaram’s tax reform of 1997.

For the next budget 2013-14, there appears to be a welcome dedication to bring down the fiscal deficit by at least 0.5 percentage points from the present level of 5.3 per cent of GDP. As is well known, the laudable goal of fiscal deficit reduction can be brought about by either reducing the share of expenditures in GDP, or increasing the share of taxes. This dilemma and choice is quite obvious in the recent fiscal cliff debate in the US. Indeed, the concentration seems to be much more on reducing the share of expenditures. The debate on the personal income tax increase, recommended and/or being discussed, has to be seen in this context, that is, yes the fiscal deficit must be reduced, but it does not follow at all that any tax need be raised. Unless there is evidence in the context of fairness, or morality, or efficiency to do so, emotive appeals to “sacrifice” should be dispensed with.

As discussed in my previous article, ‘Blinded by tax revenue’ (IE,

... contd.

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Reader's Comments (4)| Post a Comment

Why not decrease the tax rates and increase the number of tax payers

Rakesh | 25-Jan-2013Reply | Forward
Decrease the tax rates for the super rich and the chances are more people might come to this category. Check the incomes of so called below middle class people, and eventually you may increase the contributors. Also curb the filthy expenditures in the name of food securities as they do more harm than good. The amount of money which goes missing from there(at least millions) can be utilized for better good.

Curb government spending

Sanjay Saksena | 23-Jan-2013Reply | Forward
Instead of raising tax revenue, the focus should be on curbing government expenditure. Why do we have entire ministries that do no useful work ? How come there is no Ministry of Sports or Youth affairs on information and broadcastig or steel or coal in developed countries ? These countries seem to be doing quite well in these areas, so why do we need all kinds of goverment departments and agencies manned by armies of good for nothing clerks and chapraasis ( they constitute 92 percent of government employees ) ?

Soaking the rich

ashok | 23-Jan-2013Reply | Forward
The people who are paying 63% of India's income tax, no guarantee that they are not hiding something from the taxman, are keeping the economy going in difficult times. Much larger tax revenues are being lost to functionaries at every level of the governing pyramid. No guarantee either that all tax revenues are being wisely spent.

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