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Indian tax revenues fail to meet targets five months in a row, raise doubts on borrowing plan

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Traders say the gap between the target and actual collection may undermine the government’s plan to cut its borrowing for the year by 700 billion Rs.

Mumbai: Nothing seems to be helping India’s sovereign bond market. The optimism spurred by the government’s decision to cut its borrowing plan proved fleeting as tax collections failed to meet the target for a fifth straight month.

Revenue from the goods and services tax, or GST, totaled 944.4 billion rupees ($12.9 billion) in September, falling short of the 1-trillion rupee monthly target. The gap, traders say, may undermine the government’s plan to cut its borrowing for the year by 700 billion rupees.

“We are concerned about how the government will meet this kind of cut in borrowing,” said Sudhir Agarwal, a fund manager at UTI Asset Management Co. “We are seeing some hiccups in the GST numbers. We will be on wait-and-watch, keeping an eye on government revenues and the resulting fiscal scenario.”

On a cash accounting basis, the collections are likely at around 900 billion rupees per month during April-September, implying a higher required monthly run-rate of 1.19 billion rupees for the October-March period, according to Kotak Mahindra Bank.

“We believe that without expenditure cuts, it will be difficult to stick to the budgeted target,” economists Suvodeep Rakshit and Upasna Bhardwaj wrote in a note, forecasting a wider fiscal deficit of 3.5 percent against the government’s target of 3.3 percent. That won’t be easy going into state-elections later this year and general elections in 2019.

Sovereign debt in India have been battered by a tumbling currency and rising prices of oil, the nation’s top import, with the yield on 10-year bond reaching a four-year high of 8.23 percent last month. The RBI’s announcement of $5 billion of bond purchases in October and the government’s truncated borrowing plan provided some respite on Monday- Bloomberg

https://theprint.in/economy/indian-...-a-row-raise-doubts-on-borrowing-plan/128781/
 
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Traders say the gap between the target and actual collection may undermine the government’s plan to cut its borrowing for the year by 700 billion Rs.

Mumbai: Nothing seems to be helping India’s sovereign bond market. The optimism spurred by the government’s decision to cut its borrowing plan proved fleeting as tax collections failed to meet the target for a fifth straight month.

Revenue from the goods and services tax, or GST, totaled 944.4 billion rupees ($12.9 billion) in September, falling short of the 1-trillion rupee monthly target. The gap, traders say, may undermine the government’s plan to cut its borrowing for the year by 700 billion rupees.

“We are concerned about how the government will meet this kind of cut in borrowing,” said Sudhir Agarwal, a fund manager at UTI Asset Management Co. “We are seeing some hiccups in the GST numbers. We will be on wait-and-watch, keeping an eye on government revenues and the resulting fiscal scenario.”

On a cash accounting basis, the collections are likely at around 900 billion rupees per month during April-September, implying a higher required monthly run-rate of 1.19 billion rupees for the October-March period, according to Kotak Mahindra Bank.

“We believe that without expenditure cuts, it will be difficult to stick to the budgeted target,” economists Suvodeep Rakshit and Upasna Bhardwaj wrote in a note, forecasting a wider fiscal deficit of 3.5 percent against the government’s target of 3.3 percent. That won’t be easy going into state-elections later this year and general elections in 2019.

Sovereign debt in India have been battered by a tumbling currency and rising prices of oil, the nation’s top import, with the yield on 10-year bond reaching a four-year high of 8.23 percent last month. The RBI’s announcement of $5 billion of bond purchases in October and the government’s truncated borrowing plan provided some respite on Monday- Bloomberg

https://theprint.in/economy/indian-...-a-row-raise-doubts-on-borrowing-plan/128781/
You do realize that tax collection is still growing at 20pc even if it misses target. They had targeted 22 pc growth which was extremely ambitious. 20 is a great achievement also.
 
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You do realize that tax collection is still growing at 20pc even if it misses target. They had targeted 22 pc growth which was extremely ambitious. 20 is a great achievement also.
Dnt xplain ..some people post without reading or understanding the content
 
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You do realize that tax collection is still growing at 20pc even if it misses target. They had targeted 22 pc growth which was extremely ambitious. 20 is a great achievement also.
Dnt xplain ..some people post without reading or understanding the content

Tell that to these traders

Traders say the gap between the target and actual collection may undermine the government’s plan to cut its borrowing for the year by 700 billion Rs.

Tax from petroleum products have increased and will offset the loss in GST. Direct tax also has increased a lot which is also good enough to compensate the difference in GST

Humm
 
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Tax from petroleum products have increased and will offset the loss in GST. Direct tax also has increased a lot which is also good enough to compensate the difference in GST


But Indirect Taxes Automatically Result In Increase In Cost Of Production.Not Good For Industry
 
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But Indirect Taxes Automatically Result In Increase In Cost Of Production.Not Good For Industry
GST is the indirect tax. Increase in GST may actually hurt industry selectively. Tax of petroleum is universal tax, not indirect tax. It increases inflation as a whole and not selective to industry. So, everything will get expensive. Even crops will become expensive s truck charge will increase. So, it will lead to inflation. In this case, income for farmers, truckers, workers etc will all increase. As long as India gets sufficient foreign investment to offset the foreign exchange loss, it is all fine. Getting foreign investment is the main requirement when fuel price hikes.

The inflation will cut the debt level while the increase in input cost can be transferred to people. If the situation is that India is facing GDP decline and inflation, only then it is a problem. Otherwise, inflation helps growth by reducing the value of debt.

Indian GDP in Q1 grew 13.6% nominally with inflation of 5.4% which made net growth of 8.2%. So, the situation is not bad for Indian manufacturing. It is only bad for people who keep high savings, mainly rich and middle class ones
 
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