This experience with the effects of tax reduction and rationalisation on
revenue generation has implications for other areas of taxes as well.
Though in these cases revised revenue estimates for 2001-02 are higher
than in 2000-01, the shortfall relative to budgeted estimates must to some
degree be attributed to the reduction in rates and the rationalisation of
tariffs. Thus, if the trend towards revenue shortfall in 2001-02 is to be
stalled, it would be necessary for the government to both adjust tax rates
or the tax base suitably as well as work towards a reversal of the
recession.
Interestingly, however, the shortfall in tax collection has not affected
the government’s expenditure as adversely as is to be expected. As Chart 3
shows, while there was a shortfall in revenue expenditures relative to
budget estimates to the tune of Rs. 10,000 crore, an increase in plan
expenditure relative to budgeted, has resulted in an overall shortfall in
expenditure of just about Rs. 5000 crore. The question then is how the
government has been able to sustain its expenditures despite the huge tax
collection shortfall.
Chart
3 >>
There are two developments of relevance here, besides the fact that a
third of the tax revenue shortfall is a burden on the states rather than
the centre, making the latter’s revenue loss on this count about Rs.
20,000 crore. First, despite the recession, the government has been able
not just to meet but in fact exceed its non-tax revenue by Rs.1,500 crore
relative to what was budgeted (Chart 4). This is predominantly due to
windfall gains in two areas. An excess accretion of Rs. 3,000 crore in the
case of Dividends and Profits, due to a sharp jump in dividends from
public sector enterprises from the budgeted Rs.5419.50 crore to the
realised Rs.10295.78 crore. This is largely explained by the one-time
“revenue farming” resorted to by the government, by transferring to itself
cash surpluses with enterprises like VSNL prior to their disinvestment.
The other was the gain in non-tax revenues in Communications, which stood
at Rs.7395.21 crore against a budgeted figure of Rs.3725.29 crore because
of licence fees for basic/cellular telecom services and fees from VSNL,
MTNL and BSNL.
Chart
4 >>
The second, and more obvious way in which the government has been able to
keep expenditures going is by increasing its budgeted fiscal deficit of Rs.
116314 crore to an estimated Rs.131721 crore and its budgeted open market
borrowing of Rs. 77353 crore to an actual Rs. 91480 crore, which helped
neutralise the much lower than budgeted receipts from disinvestments as
well.
It should be obvious that the government cannot expect the first of these
windfall gains to accrue every year. Yet, the budgeted figures for 2002-03
provides for a large contribution from non-tax revenues, that rose in
2001-02 to 33 per cent of all revenues as compared with 28.9 per cent in
2000-01. Revenues from Dividends and Profits are expected to remain at Rs.
18805 crore as compared with Rs. 18292 crore and revenues from the
Communications sector at Rs.5256 crore as compare with Rs. 7395 crore. But
with the government having chosen to budget for a fiscal deficit of just
Rs.135524 crore in 2002-03 as compared with 131721 crore in 2001-02, even
this is inadequate to finance the close to Rs.46,000 crore increase in
expenditure it expects to incur in the coming financial year (Chart 3).
It is for this reason that the government has decided to resort to a range
of imposts which put together seems to have no driving perspective other
than increasing revenues through any means possible. In the event, the
government has budgeted for a Rs.39107 crore increase in tax revenues
(Chart 2). Since revenues from Customs duties are expected to rise by just
Rs. 2000 crore from their depressed 2001-02 levels, the burden must be
imposed through other means. The structure of that burden is disconcerting
indeed. While corporation taxes are expected to contribute an additional
Rs.9,500 crore, taxes on income are budgeted to garner an additional
Rs.8,000 crore and excise duties a huge Rs.17,000 crore.
Chart
2 >> |