Union Budget 2023-24 and Taxation Policy
DIRECT TAXES
·
Direct Tax proposals
aim to maintain continuity and stability of
taxation, further simplify and rationalise various
provisions to reduce the compliance burden, promote the entrepreneurial
spirit and provide tax relief to citizens.
·
Rebate
limit of Personal
Income Tax to be increased to Rs. 7 lakh from the current Rs.
5 lakh in the new tax regime. Thus, persons in the new tax regime, with income
up to Rs. 7 lakh to not pay any tax.
·
Tax structure in new personal
income tax regime, introduced in 2020 with six income slabs, to change by
reducing the number of slabs to five and increasing
the tax exemption limit to Rs. 3 lakh. Change to provide major relief to
all tax payers in the new regime.
·
Proposal to extend
the benefit of standard deduction of Rs. 50,000 to salaried
individual, and deduction from family pension up to Rs. 15,000, in the new tax
regime.
·
Highest
surcharge rate to reduce from
37 per cent to 25 per cent in the new tax regime. This to further result in
reduction of the maximum personal income tax rate to 39 per cent.
·
The limit for tax
exemption on leave encashment on retirement of non-government
salaried employees to increase to Rs. 25 lakh.
·
Deduction for
expenditure incurred on payments made to MSMEs to be allowed only when payment
is actually made in order to support MSMEs in timely receipt of payments.
·
New
co-operatives that commence
manufacturing activities till 31.3.2024 to get the benefit of a lower
tax rate of 15 per cent, as presently available to new manufacturing
companies.
·
Opportunity provided
to sugar co-operatives to claim payments made to sugarcane farmers for the
period prior to assessment year 2016-17 as expenditure. This expected to
provide them a relief of almost Rs. 10,000 crore.
·
Provision of a higher
limit of Rs. 2 lakh per member for cash deposits to and loans in cash
by Primary Agricultural Co-operative Societies (PACS) and Primary Co-operative
Agriculture and Rural Development Banks (PCARDBs).
·
A higher limit
of Rs. 3 crore for TDS on cash withdrawal to be provided to
co-operative societies.
·
Date
of incorporation for income tax
benefits to start-ups to be extended from 31.03.23 to 31.3.24.
·
Proposal to provide
the benefit of carry forward of losses on change of shareholding of start-ups
from seven years of incorporation to ten years.
· Deduction from capital
gains on investment in residential house under sections 54 and 54F to be capped at Rs. 10 crore for better targeting of tax concessions and exemptions.
·
Proposal to
limit income tax exemption from proceeds of insurance policies
with very high value. Where aggregate of premium for life insurance
policies (other than ULIP) issued on or after 1st April, 2023 is above Rs. 5
lakh, income from only those policies with aggregate premium up to Rs. 5 lakh
shall be exempt.
·
Income of authorities,
boards and commissions set up by statutes of the Union or State for the purpose
of housing, development of cities, towns and villages, and regulating, or
regulating and developing an activity or matter, proposed to be exempted from
income tax.
·
Minimum
threshold of Rs. 10,000/-
for TDS to be removed and taxability relating to online gaming
to be clarified. Proposal to provide for TDS and taxability on net winnings at
the time of withdrawal or at the end of the financial year.
·
Conversion of gold
into electronic gold receipt and vice versa not to be treated as capital gain.
·
TDS rate to be reduced
from 30 per cent to 20 per cent on taxable portion of EPF withdrawal in non-PAN
cases.
·
Income from Market
Linked Debentures to be taxed.
·
Deployment of about
100 Joint Commissioners for disposal of small appeals in order to reduce the
pendency of appeals at Commissioner level.
·
Increased selectivity
in taking up appeal cases for scrutiny of returns already received this year.
·
Period of tax
benefits to funds relocating to IFSC, GIFT City extended
till 31.03.2025.
·
Certain acts of
omission of liquidators under section 276A of the Income Tax Act to be decriminalized with
effect from 1st April, 2023.
·
Carry forward of
losses on strategic disinvestment including that of IDBI Bank to be
allowed.
· Agniveer Fund to be provided EEE status. The payment received from the Agniveer Corpus Fund by the Agniveers enrolled in Agnipath Scheme, 2022 proposed to be exempt from taxes. Deduction in the computation of total income is proposed to be allowed to the Agniveer on the contribution made by him or the Central Government to his Seva Nidhi account.
INDIRECT TAXES
· Number of basic customs duty rates on goods, other than textiles and agriculture, reduced to 13 from 21.
· Minor changes in the basic custom duties, cesses and surcharges on some items including toys, bicycles, automobiles and naphtha.
·
Excise duty exempted
on GST-paid compressed bio gas contained in blended compressed
natural gas.
·
Customs Duty on
specified capital goods/machinery for manufacture of lithium-ion cell
for use in battery of electrically operated vehicle (EVs) extended to
31.03.2024
·
Customs duty exempted
on vehicles, specified automobile parts/components, sub-systems and tyres when
imported by notified testing agencies, for the purpose of testing and/ or
certification, subject to conditions.
·
Basic customs duty
reduced on parts of open cells of TV panels to 2.5 per cent.
·
Basic customs duty
on electric kitchen chimney increased to 15 per cent from 7.5
per cent.
·
Basic customs duty
on heat coil for manufacture of electric kitchen chimneys
reduced to 15 per cent from 20 per cent.
·
Denatured
ethyl alcohol used in chemical
industry exempted from basic customs duty.
·
Basic customs duty
reduced on acid grade fluorspar (containing by weight more
than 97 per cent of calcium fluoride) to 2.5 per cent from 5 per cent.
·
Basic customs duty
on crude glycerin for use in manufacture of epicholorhydrin
reduced to 2.5 per cent from 7.5 per cent.
·
Duty reduced on key
inputs for domestic manufacture of shrimp feed.
·
Basic customs duty
reduced on seeds used in the manufacture of lab grown diamonds.
·
Duties on articles
made from dore and bars of gold and platinum increased.
·
Import duty on silver
dore, bars and articles increased.
· Basic Customs Duty
exemption on raw materials for manufacture of CRGO Steel, ferrous scrap and nickel cathode continued.
·
Concessional BCD of
2.5 per cent on copper scrap is continued.
·
Basic customs duty
rate on compounded rubber increased to 25 per cent from 10 per
cent or 30 per kg whichever is lower.
·
National Calamity
Contingent Duty (NCCD) on specified cigarettes revised upwards
by about 16 per cent.
Legislative Changes in
Customs Laws
·
Customs Act, 1962 to
be amended to specify a time limit of nine months from date of filing application for passing final order by Settlement Commission.
·
Customs Tariff Act to
be amended to clarify the intent and scope of provisions relating to Anti-Dumping
Duty (ADD), Countervailing Duty (CVD), and Safeguard Measures.
·
CGST Act to be
amendedto raise the minimum threshold of tax amount for
launching prosecution under GST from one crore to two crore; and to reduce
the compounding amount from the present range of 50 to 150 per
cent of tax amount to the range of 25 to 100 per cent;
These are hylights about Taxation that the Union
Minister of Finance and Corporate Affairs Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman presented the
Union Budget 2023-24 in Parliament on 01 FEB 2023 1:35PM.
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