In what may bring relief to personal income tax assessees from the next financial year, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Tuesday said many recommendations of the Parliament standing committee on the Direct Taxes Code (DTC), expected to come into effect from 2013-14, would be accepted.
The committee, headed by Bharatiya Janata Party leader Yashwant Sinha, had recommended raising the tax exemption limit from Rs 2 lakh a year to Rs 3 lakh, besides much wider tax slabs.
Given the next Budget would be the last of the UPA-II government, tax experts feel the finance minister may give relief to individual tax payers, despite constraints on the fiscal front.
In his opening remark on the Finance Bill in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday, Mukherjee said he would table the DTC Bill in the monsoon session of Parliament. Officials said if the Bill was tabled in the monsoon session, it could be affected from the next financial year, provided it was passed in Parliament.
"I will have the opportunity, after the Budget session is over, to go through all the recommendations (of the standing committee) and after the approval of the Cabinet in the next monsoon session, bring the DTC Bill for approval of both the Houses," Mukherjee said. "And at that stage, many of the recommendations of the standing committee would be accepted," he said.
He said he could not go through all the recommendations of the standing committee on DTC, as the report was given on March 9, and the Budget was tabled on March 16.
The committee also recommended 20 per cent tax on annual income of Rs 10-Rs 20 lakh, against the current provision of Rs 5-8 lakh and DTC Bill provision of Rs 5-10 lakh.
Neeru Ahuja, partner, Deloitte, Haskins & Sells, said if DTC was enacted from April 1, 2013, the government might announce tax relief for individual tax payers, keeping an eye on the general elections. This is despite the Centre's fiscal deficit widening to 5.9 per cent of the gross domestic product in 2011-12, against the Budget Estimate of 4.6 per cent. For the current financial year, fiscal deficit is pegged at 5.1