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Budget focuses on employment, skilling and MSMEs

Minister of Finance and Corporate Affairs Nirmala Sitharaman, while presenting the Union Budget 2024-25 in Parliament on Tuesday said that India’s inflation continues to be low, stable and moving towards the four per cent target. Core inflation currently is 3.1 per cent and steps are being taken to ensure supplies of perishable goods reach the market adequately.

The Finance Minister said that as mentioned in the interim budget, the focus is on four major castes, namely  Poor, Women, Youth and Farmers.

Dwelling on the Budget theme, Sitharaman said, turning attention to the full year and beyond, in this budget, we particularly focus on employment, skilling, MSMEs, and the middle class. She announced the Prime Minister’s package of five schemes and initiatives to facilitate employment, skilling and other opportunities for 4.1 crore youth over 5 years with a central outlay of ₹2 lakh crore. This year, ₹1.48 lakh crore has been allocated for education, employment and skilling.

The Finance Minister said, that in pursuit of ‘Viksit Bharat’, the budget envisages sustained efforts on the nine priorities for generating ample opportunities for all. These priorities are Productivity and resilience in Agriculture, Employment & Skilling, Inclusive Human Resource Development and Social Justice, Manufacturing & Services, Urban Development, Energy Security, Infrastructure, Innovation, Research & Development and Next Generation Reforms.

The Finance Minister announced that the government will undertake a comprehensive review of the agriculture research set-up to bring the focus on raising productivity. New 109 high-yielding and climate-resilient varieties of 32 field and horticulture crops will be released for cultivation by farmers.

In the next two years, one crore farmers across the country will be initiated into natural farming supported by certification and branding. 10,000 need-based bio-input resource centres will be established.

To achieve self-sufficiency in pulses and oilseeds, the government will strengthen their production, storage and marketing and to achieve ‘atmanirbharta’ for oil seeds such as mustard, groundnut, sesame, soybean, and sunflower.

The government, in partnership with the states, will facilitate the implementation of the Digital Public Infrastructure in agriculture for coverage of farmers and their lands in three years.

Sitharaman announced a provision of ₹1.52 lakh crore for agriculture and allied sectors this year.

The Finance Minister said that the government will implement three schemes for ‘Employment Linked Incentive’, as part of the Prime Minister’s package. These will be based on enrolment in the EPFO, and focus on recognition of first-time employees, and support to employees and employers.

The government will also facilitate higher participation of women in the workforce through setting up of working women hostels in collaboration with industry and establishing creches.

Referring to the Skilling programme, the Finance Minister announced a new centrally sponsored scheme, as the 4th scheme under the Prime Minister’s package, for skilling in collaboration with state governments and Industry. 20 lakh youth will be skilled over 5 years and 1,000 Industrial Training Institutes will be upgraded in hub and spoke arrangements with outcome orientation.

She also announced that the Model Skill Loan Scheme will be revised to facilitate loans up to ₹7.5 lakh with a guarantee from a government-promoted Fund, which is expected to help 25,000 students every year.

To help the youth, who have not been eligible for any benefit under government schemes and policies, she announced financial support for loans up to ₹10 lakh for higher education in domestic institutions. E-vouchers for this purpose will be given directly to one lakh students every year for annual interest subvention of three per cent of the loan amount.

Talking about the Saturation approach, the Finance Minister emphasised the implementation of schemes meant to support economic activities by craftsmen, artisans, self-help groups, scheduled caste, scheduled tribe and women entrepreneurs, and street vendors, such as PM Vishwakarma, PM SVANidhi, National Livelihood Missions, and Stand-Up India will be stepped up.

The government will formulate a plan, Purvodaya, for the all-round development of the eastern region of the country covering Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. This will cover human resource development, infrastructure, and the generation of economic opportunities to make the region an engine to attain Viksit Bharat.

The Finance Minister announced that to improve the socio-economic condition of tribal communities, the government will launch the Pradhan Mantri Janjatiya Unnat Gram Abhiyan by adopting saturation coverage for tribal families in tribal-majority villages and aspirational districts covering 63,000 villages and benefitting five crore tribal people.

More than 100 branches of India Post Payment Bank will be set up in the North East region to expand the banking services.

She said a provision of ₹2.66 lakh crore for rural development including rural infrastructure was made this year.

Sitharaman said this budget provides special attention to MSMEs and manufacturing, particularly labour-intensive manufacturing. A separately constituted self-financing guarantee fund will provide, to each applicant, a guarantee covering up to ₹100 crore, while the loan amount may be larger. Similarly, Public sector banks will build their in-house capability to assess MSMEs for credit, instead of relying on external assessment. She also announced a new mechanism for facilitating the continuation of bank credit to MSMEs during their stress period.

The limit of Mudra loans will be enhanced to ₹20 lakh from the current ₹10 lakh for those entrepreneurs who have availed and successfully repaid previous loans under the ‘Tarun’ category.

Financial support for setting up of 50 multi-product food irradiation units in the MSME sector will be provided. The setting up of 100 food quality and safety testing labs with NABL accreditation will also be facilitated. To enable MSMEs and traditional artisans to sell their products in international markets, E-Commerce Export Hubs will be set up in public-private-partnership mode.

The Finance Minister said that as the 5th scheme under the Prime Minister’s package, the government will launch a comprehensive scheme for providing internship opportunities in 500 top companies to one crore youth in five years.

Under the PM Awas Yojana Urban 2.0, the housing needs of one crore urban poor and middle-class families will be addressed with an investment of ₹10 lakh crore. This will include the central assistance of ₹2.2 lakh crore in the next five years.

In partnership with the State Governments and Multilateral Development Banks, the government will promote water supply, sewage treatment and solid waste management projects and services for 100 large cities through bankable projects.

She added that building on the success of PM SVANidhi Scheme in transforming the lives of street vendors, the Government envisions a scheme to support each year, over the next five years, the development of 100 weekly ‘haats’ or street food hubs in select cities.

The Finance Minister said, in line with the announcement in the interim budget, PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana has been launched to install rooftop solar plants to enable one crore households to obtain free electricity up to 300 units every month. The scheme has generated a remarkable response with more than 1.28 crore registrations and 14 lakh applications.

Nuclear energy is expected to form a very significant part of the energy mix for Viksit Bharat.

The Finance Minister underlined that the significant investment the Central Government has made over the years in building and improving infrastructure has had a strong multiplier effect on the economy. The government will endeavour to maintain strong fiscal support for infrastructure over the next five years, in conjunction with imperatives of other priorities and fiscal consolidation. ₹11,11,111 crore for capital expenditure has been allocated this year, which is 3.4 per cent of GDP.

The Finance Minister announced that Phase IV of PMGSY will be launched to provide all-weather connectivity to 25,000 rural habitations which have become eligible given their population increase.

For Irrigation and Flood Mitigation in Bihar, through the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme and other sources, the government will provide financial support for projects with an estimated cost of ₹11,500 crores such as the Kosi-Mechi intra-state link and 20 other ongoing and new schemes including barrages, river pollution abatement and irrigation projects. The government will also provide assistance to Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Sikkim for flood management, landslides and related projects.

The Finance Minister said that the government will operationalize the Anusandhan National Research Fund for basic research and prototype development and set up a mechanism for spurring private sector-driven research and innovation at commercial scale with a financing pool of ₹1 lakh crore in line with the announcement in the interim budget.

With continued emphasis on expanding the space economy by five times in the next 10 years, a venture capital fund of ₹1,000 crore will be set up.

The Finance Minister said that the government will formulate an Economic Policy Framework to delineate the overarching approach to economic development and set the scope of the next generation of reforms for facilitating employment opportunities and sustaining high growth.

The government will facilitate the provision of a wide array of services to labour, including those for employment and skilling. A comprehensive integration of the e-Shram portal with other portals will facilitate such a one-stop solution. Shram Suvidha and Samadhan portals will be revamped to enhance ease of compliance for industry and trade.

The government will develop a taxonomy for climate finance to enhance the availability of capital for climate adaptation and mitigation.

The rules and regulations for Foreign Direct Investment and Overseas Investments will be simplified to facilitate foreign direct investments, nudge prioritization, and promote opportunities for using Indian Rupee as a currency for overseas investments.

NPS-Vatsalya, a plan for contribution by parents and guardians for minors will be started. On attaining the age of majority, the plan can be converted seamlessly into a normal NPS account.

The Finance Minister said that the Committee to review the NPS has made considerable progress in its work and a solution will be evolved which addresses the relevant issues while maintaining fiscal prudence to protect the common citizens.

The Finance Minister informed that for the year 2024-25, the total receipts other than borrowings and the total expenditure are estimated at ₹32.07 lakh crore and ₹48.21 lakh crore respectively. The net tax receipts are estimated at ₹25.83 lakh crore and the fiscal deficit is estimated at 4.9 per cent of GDP.

She said the gross and net market borrowings through dated securities during 2024-25 are estimated at ₹14.01 lakh crore and ₹11.63 lakh crore respectively.

Sitharaman emphasised that the fiscal consolidation path announced by her in 2021 has served the economy very well, and the government will aim to reach a deficit below 4.5 per cent next year.

Apart from giving relief to four crore salaried individuals and pensioners of the country in the direct taxes, Union Budget 2024-25 seeks to comprehensively review the direct and indirect taxes in the next six months, simplifying them, reducing tax incidence and compliance burdens and broadening the tax nets. The Budget proposes comprehensive rationalization of the GST tax structure along with a review of the Customs Duty rate structure to improve the tax base and support domestic manufacturing. A comprehensive review of the Income Tax Act is targeted at reducing disputes and litigations and to make the act lucid, concise and easy to read. Sitharaman said that simplification of tax regimes without exemptions and deductions for corporate and personal income tax has been appreciated by taxpayers as over 58 per cent of corporate tax came from simplified tax regime in 2022-23 and more than two-thirds of taxpayers have switched over to the new personal income tax regime.

Budget 2024-25 increased the standard deduction of salaried employees from ₹50,000/- to ₹75,000/- for those opting for the new tax regime. Similarly, the deduction on family pension for pensioners enhanced from ₹15,000/- to ₹25,000/-. Assessments now can be reopened beyond three years up to five years from the end of the year of assessment, only if, the escaped income is more than ₹50 Lakh. The new tax regime rate structure is also revised to give salaried employee benefits up to ₹17,500/- in income tax.

To promote investment and foster employment, Budget has given a boost to entrepreneurial spirit and start-up ecosystem, abolishing angel tax for all classes of investors. Further, a simpler tax regime for foreign shipping companies operating domestic cruises is proposed looking at the tremendous potential of cruise tourism. Foreign mining companies selling raw diamonds in the country can now benefit from safe harbor rates which will benefit the diamond industry. Further, the corporate tax rate on foreign companies was reduced from 40 to 35 per cent to attract foreign capital.

The budget further simplified the direct tax regime for charities, TDS rate structure and capital gains taxation. The two tax exemption regimes for charities will be merged into one. Five per cent TDS on many payments to be merged into two per cent TDS and 20 per cent TDS on repurchase of units by mutual funds or UTI stands withdrawn. TDS rate on e-commerce operators reduced from one per cent to 0.1 per cent. Now credit of TCS will be given on TDS deducted from salary. Budget decriminalized delay of payment of TDS up to the due date of filing of TDS statement. Standard Operating Procedure soon for simplified and rationalized compounding guidelines for TDS defaults.

On Capital gains, short-term gains shall henceforth attract a rate of 20 per cent on certain financial assets. Long-term gains on all financial and non-financial assets to attract a 12.5 per cent rate. The limit of exemption of capital gains has been increased to ₹1.25 Lakh per year to benefit lower and middle-income classes. Listed financial assets held for more than a year and unlisted financial and non-financial assets held for more than two years to be classified as long-term assets. Unlisted bonds and debentures, debt mutual funds and market-linked debentures will continue to attract applicable capital gains tax.

Acknowledging that GST has decreased tax incidence on the common man and terming it a success of vast proportions, Sitharaman said that GST has reduced compliance burden and logistics costs for trade and industry. Now the Government envisages further simplifying and rationalizing the tax structure to expand it to the remaining sectors. The budget also proposed to further digitalise and make paperless the remaining services of Customs and Income Tax including rectification and order giving effect to appellate orders over the next two years.

Customs duties have been revised to rationalize and revise them for ease of trade and reduction of disputes. Giving relief to cancer patients, Budget fully exempted three more cancer-treating medicines from custom duties, namely, Trastuzumab Deruxtecan, Osimertinib and Durvalumab. There will be a reduction in Basic Customs Duty on X-ray machines tubes and flat panel detectors. BCD on mobile phones, Printed Circuit Board Assembly and mobile chargers reduced to 15 per cent. To give a fillip to the processing and refining of critical minerals, the Budget fully exempted custom duties on 25 rare earth minerals like lithium and reduced BCD on two of them. The budget proposed to exempt capital goods for the manufacturing of solar panels. To boost India’s seafood exports, BCD on broodstock, polychaete worms, shrimps and fish feed was reduced to five per cent. The budget will foster the competitiveness of Indian leather and textile articles of export. BCD reduced from 7.5 per cent to five per cent in Methylene Diphenyl Diisocyanate used for the manufacture of spandex yarn. Custom duties on gold and silver were reduced to six per cent and on platinum to 6.4 per cent. BCD on ferro nickel and blister copper was removed, while, BCD on ammonium nitrate increased from 7.5 to 10 per cent to support existing and new capacities in the pipeline. Similarly, BCD on PVC flex banners increased from 10 to 25 per cent considering the hazard to the environment. To incentivize domestic manufacturing, BCD on PCBA of specific telecom equipment increased from 10 to 15 per cent.

For dispute resolution and disposal-off backlogs, FM proposed the Vivad se Vishwas Scheme, 2024 for resolution of certain income tax disputes pending in appeal. The monetary limits for filing appeals related to direct taxes, excise and service tax in High Courts, Supreme Courts and tribunals have been increased to ₹60 Lakh, ₹2 Crore and ₹5 Crore, respectively. Further to reduce litigation and provide certainty in international taxation, the scope of safe harbour rules is to be expanded and the transfer pricing assessment procedure is to be streamlined.