After
one and half years of hectic lobbying, industry chamber
CII has realised that it''s easier to live with FBT rather
than persuade the Finance minister to relent. CNBC-TV18
reports on India Inc''s wish list this time around.
Finance
minister P Chidambaram is known to be one who doesn''t
relent easily. Even though the industry has been lobbying
hard for the last year and half to scrap the FBT, the
FM hasn''t budged and as the budget making exercise kicks
off, CII has decided to give up its battle to scrap
FBT.
"I
have conceded defeat on FBT. Now we would like the FM
to just give an alternative in terms of choosing between
higher corporate tax or FBT, " says CII president
R Seshasayee and MD, Ashok Leyland.
If
the government were to hike corporate tax rates, it
would go up to 31 per cent. Besides FBT, a lot of corporate
India''s long wish list mirrors its previous one. To
encourage savings, CII wants the limit under 80C to
be raised from Rs1 lakh to Rs2 lakh provided the additional
Rs1 lakh savings is in infrastructure bonds.
On
direct taxes, the industry body wants MAT to be abolished,
distribution tax on dividend and stamp duty on mergers
reduced and surcharge on income tax for domestic companies
be removed.
On
indirect taxes, the industry is okay with another cut
in peak customs duty to 10 per cent. CII wants cenvat
rate to be reduced to 14 per cent. While a broader service
tax net is acceptable to the industry, a hike in service
tax rates is not.
And
finally CII wants the CST rate to be reduced to 2 per
cent and
a concrete roadmap for implementation of the much awaited
GST to be announced and, like the previous year, disinvestments
is on corporate India''s to do list for the government.
But given the political realities, this wish may remain
just that-wishful thinking.