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Officials said deferred spectrum charges to be paid by telcos also make up a large chunk of the expected revenues
In an interview with Ruchika Chitravanshi, Rajiv Memani, chairman and managing director of EY India, said that there is a strong enabling environment for private sector investment
Micro, small and medium enterprises will continue to avail all non-tax benefits in their respective categories post re-classification for three years, the government said on Wednesday. The Ministry of MSME has notified that in case of re-classification in terms of investment in plant and machinery or equipment or turnover or both, and consequent re-classification, an enterprise shall continue to avail of all non-tax benefits of the category it was in before the re-classification for three years from the date of the such upward change. "This decision has been taken after due deliberations with MSME stakeholders and is in line with the Aatma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan. The Ministry of MSME, Government of India, has allowed those registered MSMEs to continue to avail of non-tax benefits for three years, instead of one year, in case of an upward graduation in their category and consequent reclassification," an official statement said. Non-tax benefits include benefits of various government
The total non-tax revenue target for the year is Rs 2.69 trillion, while that for disinvestment is Rs 65,000 crore
Non-tax revenue came in at Rs 49,251 crore, or 18.3 per cent of the full year target of Rs 2.69 trillion, compared with 48 per cent for the same period last year
The Reason: Fall in contribution from telcos and lower dividend from RBI
The govt is now giving final touches to the contours of Union Budget 2022. The Budget can be classified into two parts -- the Capital Budget and the Revenue Budget. Find out what is Revenue Budget
In comparison, the Manmohan Singh government earned about Rs 99,000 crore in its first seven years from FY05 to FY11
36 paise from borrowings and other liabilities for every rupee in the government coffer
Lay out a credible fiscal consolidation plan, reverse tax buoyancy decline, and boost non-tax revenues
The central government has so far collected non-tax revenue of Rs 84,023.78 crore during the ongoing financial year, Minister of State for Finance Anurag Singh Thakur said on Sunday. In a written reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha, Thakur said the total corporate tax collection so far during this financial year is Rs 95,533 crore, while the total GST collection in the current financial year is Rs 3,59,112 crore. "The total non-tax revenue collected by the Central Government, so far, during this financial year is Rs 84,023.78 crore (Provisional)," he said. Thakur said the total market borrowings of the central government so far this financial year stands at Rs 7.06 lakh crore. Replying to a separate question, Thakur said the overall expenditure of Government of India stood at Rs 10,54,209 crore as on July 31, 2020. He also listed out few expenditure items related to fighting COVID-19 pandemic, including Rs 8,575.17 crore under 'India COVID-19 Emergency Response and Health Syste
Elaborating on the fiscal situation, the former finance secretary said that indirect taxes, GST, excise duty on petroleum products and customs will under-perform
The Budget estimated Rs 1.06 trillion to come from dividends from RBI, public sector banks and financial institutions in the current financial year
A robust dispute settlement system would help the government unlock tax revenues, and also aid ease of doing business
In Budget 2020 speech, the FM should state how she intends to return to the 7% track, and the hard decisions she will take to adjust to the realities of a slowing economy, writes T N Ninan
The FRBM Act, after its amendment in 2018, allows a fiscal deficit slippage of not more than 0.5% for any given year, provided there are justifications
Compared to the earlier expectation when that year's Budget was presented, the fall was worse - 33% down from the Rs 2.9 trillion estimated then