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This Article is From May 01, 2015

Finance Minister Jaitley Tries to Strike Peace with RBI, Foreign Investors

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has sought to placate the Reserve bank of India (RBI) and foreign investors by putting on hold a major overhaul of financial regulation and offering tax concessions on stocks and bonds.

Finance Minister Jaitley Tries to Strike Peace with RBI, Foreign Investors
File Photo: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has sought to placate the Reserve bank of India (RBI) and foreign investors by putting on hold a major overhaul of financial regulation and offering tax concessions on stocks and bonds.

Mr Jaitley's plans, announced in the annual Budget in February, would have stripped the RBI of authority to regulate the government bond market and manage public debt.

US and European investor groups had also been pressing the government, which is more supportive of business than its predecessor, to clarify its tax regime after inspectors tried to recover back money they say is owned on years of previously untaxed gains.  Mr Jaitley said investors would have to wait for a court decision on the tax notices. In an attempt to spur the construction sector, he eased MAT rules for real estate investment trusts.

Mr Jaitley has signed an agreement with the RBI to bring down inflation, and is trying to accelerate economic growth through tax and financial reforms.

He offered to exempt foreign investors from minimum alternative tax (MAT) of about 20 per cent on income from securities transactions, royalties and technical services. Tax experts said the move would take effect from this month.

"This will bring relief to debt funds... but unfortunately the Finance Minister has not provided any relief for the past period," said Rajesh H Gandhi, partner, Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP.

In India, foreign investors have so far paid 15 per cent on short-term listed equity gains, 5 per cent on gains from bonds, and nothing on long-term gains, but from late last year,  many firms received tax notices requiring them to pay MAT.

On the issue of setting up an independent public debt management agency, Jaitley said the government would now consult the RBI and come up with a detailed roadmap, but declined to give any timeline.

The climbdown marks a victory for the RBI, which said the changes could interfere with its monetary policy objectives.

A group of RBI officials wrote to lawmakers and state chief ministers expressing concern over the changes before a vote in parliament on Thursday, media have reported.

Winding up the debate on 2015/16 tax proposals in the lower house of parliament, Mr Jaitley told lawmakers that the government would seek to spur economic growth to near 9 per cent in coming years with measures such as easing goods and services tax.

Asia's third largest economy is expected to grow around 8 per cent in 2015/16 fiscal year, which would outpace China's growth rate of around 7 per cent in 2015.
© Thomson Reuters 2015

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