Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Saturday, Mar 01, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Budget
An inclusive, election budget


Monisha Adwani, Managing Director, EmmayHR: This is an out-and-out Congress budget. It has election prep written all over it. It also demonstrates economic prudence and caution. By focusing on relief and development to the agriculture sector, a clear message is being sent – the year of the Kissan is back. Also, if a cross-section of the Budget were to be analysed, the clear beneficiary is the common man, who will find it easier to come by medical relief and support, in a small or hybrid car that he will own and pay off loans that he received on the back of the subsidised education he received, thanks to the Budget presented by this government.

It is interesting to see pharmaceutical and healthcare receive impetus in the form of excise duty relief and incentive to research.

Overall, am personally pleased to see a budget assuming accountability towards the manufacturing sector. We have spent a decade bolstering the service sector and rightly so. It has yielded rich dividends in contributing to the GDP and increasing employment opportunities. However, the manufacturing sector is the foundation of our economy, as much as agriculture, and it deserves to renewed incentive to grow to competitive levels. While I expect the suggested subsidies to increase employment, I would have expected the education budget to be aimed towards cultivating talent for this sector to be more vocalised, than is the case. Creation of jobs needs to be balanced with development of talent.

There is no pathbreaking change in income tax. On indirect and corporate tax, I’m relieved that there haven’t been incremental ambitions. On fringe-benefits, I maintain that the Finance Minister needs to reflect on what tools he equips employers to retain workforces, which will aid medium and long-term value and wealth creation for the economy. FBT is a contrary action that deters employers for disbursing traditionally lock-in benefits for fear of impact.”


Rama Subramaniam, Chairman, BioPure Health Care: The Finance Minister has clearly injected vote bank politics into the Budget. He has gone overboard to please farmers and the middle-class alike and generally remained neutral to the corporate sector. However, this strategy has a positive spillover for specific sectors such as banks, automobiles, consumer durables and sectors linked to agriculture.

Focus on health, education and power generation along with focus on green technology is laudable; additional disposable income coupled with reduction in excise duty will spur growth. Women and senior citizens have found a well-deserved place in the budget. Short-term capital gain tax increase will be a damper for the capital markets in the near term.


Latha Rajan, Director – HR, Ma Foi Management Consultants: It is an inclusive budget. It has tried to address many different communities – farmers, the salaried, women, senior citizens, children, students, workers from the unorganised sector and women in rural areas. The focus has been on education, healthcare and infrastructure.

Officegoers will find the increase in the exemption limit and the widening of the slab rates to a large extent. For employees earning more than Rs 5 lakhs as salary, almost an amount of Rs 45,000 can be saved.

Crèche facilities, sponsorship of an employee-sportsperson, organising sports events for employees and guest houses have been excluded from the purview of the fringe benefit tax. The loan waiver for the farmers and the impact of the pay commission may have an adverse impact on inflation. This may lead to an increase in prices which will affect the common man.

More Stories on : Budget

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Happy… but want excise cut extended to big cars too


Excise duty on two-wheelers and small cars reduced
M&M to gain from higher farm credit
Tax sops on research to help, says SIAM
Small car, big incentives
Seeks to stimulate consumption
Disappointed on uniform excise
Positive move for technology
On par with global standards
Exide to go ahead with price hike
Hero Honda reduces prices
Rs 60,000-crore debt waiver for farmers; relief for income-tax payers
Signing off with Nehru and Valluvar
Keeping inflation under check main task: Chidambaram
‘Proof of more inclusive growth’
Research & development get a fillip
There is no case for corporate tax rate cut, says Chidambaram
Insurers happy over higher cap on Sec 80D waiver
Money for votes
Gross budgetary support increased
Steps to expand market for corporate bonds
Fiscal position improves
Excise on small cars, 2-wheelers slashed
No change in peak rate of customs duty
Budget will boost growth of manufacturing sector: KCCI
‘Textile sector has been overlooked’
Less outgo for parent companies
Smokers may downgrade
‘Every Budget is election Budget’
The ‘lucky’ Finance Minister
Rescue package for national animal
Opt for dividends
Ferro alloy units not excited over duty increase on chrome ore
Direct taxes’ share of revenue kitty tops 50% for first time
Education sector, skills development get shot in the arm
DTH set-top boxes may be no cheaper
Durables industry has little to cheer
Kerala trade, industry welcome Budget
Budget lacks transparency: Dholakia
Export duty on chrome ore hiked
Balanced approach, says Bangalore Chamber
Defence allocation proposed to be hiked by 10%
Connectivity thrust
Welcome move: Rs 20 cr for tea research
`Growth with equity'
Budget fails to cheer D-Street
FMCG stocks gain
Proposals to stimulate industrial growth
Four flagship programmes
An inclusive, election budget
‘One step forward, two backward’
Shot in arm for healthcare
Mixed reaction to excise duty parity on cement
Budget hikes excise duty on clinker
No impact on product pricing
Consumer electronics overlooked
Third quarter GDP grows at 8.4%
Goodies galore; dilution of fiscal standards may prove costly
Walking a tightrope
Widening the field
For a drink of coconut water
Industry not excited over 5-year tax holiday for star hotels
Opening the gates for irrigation
Support to Central PSUs
Specific duties proposed on unbranded petrol, diesel
Customs duty on crude, unrefined sulphur reduced to 2%
Most oil sector demands left unanswered
Pharma and biotech firms cheer tax deduction on outsourced R&D
Duty cut on six life-saving, bulk drugs
Not a bad prescription
‘Not much to cheer for’
Good for healthcare, pharmaceutical sectors
Duty to benefit AIDS patients too
Duty cut welcomed
‘Life sciences sector to benefit’
‘Level-playing field’
Fund for transmission and distribution reform
New fund for power reforms, more ultra mega projects in the offing
Power players optimistic about new T&D fund
GVK lauds focus on power sector
No curbs on iron ore export: Steel industry disappointed
Load on taxman eased
DDT, STT: Marginal reprieve
BCCT withdrawal: Good for planters
Sindhi Chamber welcomes CST cut
‘Budget is disappointing’
Hike in TUFS allocation
Mixed reaction from textile industry
Rs 2,000-cr risk capital fund to boost SMEs
Micro, SMEs will continue to receive Govt support
Major tyre producers start reducing prices
Coal watchdog on the anvil
Of Budget boost and breakfast cereals
Consumption boost, but no market triggers
PC turns Robin Hood
‘Review of tax slabs increases disposable incomes’
Have money, will spend
‘Lack of specific allocation may lead to fund leakage’
Bengal seeks information security course in IIITs
New institutes welcome; concern over faculty shortage
More IITs in the offing
Hyundai, Maruti, GM to cut prices
Gem & jewellery industry rewarded
Healthy outlook for hospitals
Healthcare delivery sector given a direction
‘Tax holiday will boost pvt healthcare’
CREDAI keen to build civil infrastructure
Realty sector upbeat on I-T exemption
Private equity players eye real estate mart in Kolkata
Paper makers cheer reduction in duty
TEA disappointed
‘Welcome focus on social development’
A ‘sensitive’ Budget
Non-profit corporation for skill development
Changes in slabs for personal income-tax
More for the middle-class
Nothing for exporters except sympathy: EEPC
etc

BusinessLine E-paper


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line