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Tax collection to exceed budget estimates this fiscal: Jaitley

Mr. Jaitley had in his Budget for 2016-17 fiscal put gross tax revenue estimate at Rs. 16.3 lakh crore.

New Delhi: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today expressed confidence that direct and indirect tax mop-up will surpass Budget estimate of Rs. 16.3 lakh crore by March-end.

Mr. Jaitley had in his Budget for 2016-17 fiscal put gross tax revenue estimate at Rs. 16.3 lakh crore, about 11 per cent higher than gross tax receipts of Rs. 14.5 lakh crore for the previous fiscal.

“We will end this year with higher revenues both direct and indirect taxes, higher than budgeted. Not only are we going to reach the budget estimates, we will exceed the budget estimates both in direct tax and indirect tax this year,” he told reporters here.

In the Budget, he had estimated a 12.64 per cent growth in direct tax to Rs. 8.47 lakh crore for 2016-17 and 10.8 per cent in indirect tax at Rs. 7.79 lakh crore.

Indirect tax collections till November had shown a 26.2 per cent jump to Rs. 5.52 lakh crore when compared with a year ago collections. This constituted 71.1 per cent of the Budget estimate. Central excise, customs and service tax make up for indirect tax kitty.

Direct tax collections, which are made up of individual income tax and corporate tax, has swelled to Rs. 5.57 lakh crore between April 1-December 19 to meet 65 per cent of the Budget estimates.

Mr. Jaitley made light of West Bengal Finance Minister Amit Mitra’s comments that his states had seen a 13 per cent drop in tax revenues post demonetisation, saying “states which are governed well, have earned well”.

He went on to point to revenues of states like Punjab and Haryana to buttress his point that there has not been any drop in tax revenues post November 8 decision of the government to junk 86 per cent of the currency in circulation.

“My assessment is that the larger integration of informal economy with the formal economy that will happen in the following quarter will lead to higher revenues of all. This is the purpose of this exercise,” he said.

He said only badly governed states will lose out.

“With a larger formal economy and integration of informal into formal, I think unless some state is very badly administered and looses out on investment, the revenues of others are going to increase,” he added.

Belying fears of slowdown in industrial activity post demonetisation, the indirect tax collection in the month of November alone grew 23.1 per cent to Rs. 67,358 crore.

For the month of November alone, customs collection grew 16.1 per cent to Rs. 20,510 crore, excise by 33.7 per cent to Rs. 29,664 crore and service tax by 15.5 per cent to Rs. 17,178 crore.

( Source : PTI )
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