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Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

A tax on a tax may sound draconian but the government has increased its dependence on cess collections to boost tax revenue.

(Photographer: Manaure Quintero/Bloomberg)  
(Photographer: Manaure Quintero/Bloomberg)  

A tax on a tax may sound draconian but that has helped India boost its revenue.

Cess—additional taxes collected to fund various initiatives of the central government—have seen a sevenfold increase over the past decade, according to an analysis of union budget documents. Not entirely surprising for one of the fastest-growing economies because as incomes rise, more people enter the tax net.

Still, a striking feature of the growth in tax revenue is how cess is now a much larger part of the bucket. In the 2018-19 revised budget figures, the government estimated Rs 1.83 lakh crore revenue from cess—12.4 percent of the net tax collections. Rewind 10 years, and the share was just 6 percent.

Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

The cess collection has spiked despite excluding the GST compensation cess—levied to make for the loss of revenue of states, if any, till July 1, 2022 after they agreed to subsume local levies with the nationwide tax. If factored in, the share of cess in India’s tax revenue has actually tripled over past decade. While the government abolished at least 16 such levies with the GST rollout, it continues to come out with new ones—the most recent one being to compensate Kerala for 2018 floods.

Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

“Several erstwhile cesses were abolished when GST was introduced with the stated intention of not complicating the indirect tax structure. The introduction of any cess would alter the GST architecture and be contrary to the objective of tax simplification,” MS Mani, partner, Deloitte India, told BloombergQuint. “It is also necessary that we do not step back to the pre-GST situation of having over a dozen cesses levied by various states to defray the expenditure incurred in relation to various events.”

Agrees Pratik Jain of PwC India. “While the government has a right to levy cess in specific situations, from an industry standpoint it becomes complicated as they need to factor these while making I.T. changes, pricing and paperwork,” he said. “The quantum of revenue generated is usually not commensurate with the administration costs and discomfort that it causes to businesses.”

Besides, a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India had flagged that cess collected for a specific purpose was not being completely transferred.

Cess is frowned upon for another reason. The central government doesn’t have to share it with states. “Empirical evidence suggests cess is not used for what it is meant for. If a cess is not deployed then what is its purpose?” Mani asked. “The reason, I believe, they love a cess is because they don’t have to share it with the states.”

Corporate Tax Bonanza

The direct tax levied on the income of companies continues to drive growth of India’s tax revenue.

Corporate taxes, which account for more than a third of nation’s tax collections, have been growing at an average 10.75 percent annually over the past eight years. While corporate tax growth dipped between 2014 and 2017, it has since bounced back to double digits.

Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

India Inc. has been demanding a corporate tax rate cut for a long time. In the 2017-18 budget, some burden was eased for companies with a turnover less than Rs 250 crore.

Despite calls for a rate cut, the effective tax rate has only gone up over the last two years. Mainly due to a cut in incentives available to companies.

Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

The Tax Shortfall

India’s tax revenue is growing and the tax net is widening. Still, it missed its budgeted tax targets. In fact, the tax shortfall of Rs 1.6 lakh crore was the highest over the past decade.

While corporate taxes missed its target marginally, the shortfall in income tax and GST was significantly higher.

That hasn’t deterred the government from setting ambitious target. The interim budget 2019-20 estimated a 13.5 percent increase in FY20. This rides on an expected 13.26 percent increase in corporation tax, an over 17 percent jump in income tax and an 18 percent increase in GST revenue over revised estimates for FY19.

Actual tax collections for 2018-19 turned out to be much weaker, necessitating scaling back of expenditure in rural and social sectors, among others, wrote Edelweiss Research in a recent note. “Besides, with tax revenue momentum much weaker, achieving a 13 percent uptick in FY20 could be challenging amid weak economic conditions. To that extent, the forthcoming budget might have to rejig the fiscal math.”

Budget 2019: Cess A Bit In Excess, And Other Tax Trends

(Updates an earlier version to highlight cess collections excluding the GST compensation cess)