Debate on Finance Bill in Rajya Sabha: FM Jaitley defends electoral bonds, says new donation norms will cleanse political funding
During the debate on Finance Bill in Rajya Sabha on Wednesday, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that the new bill will cleanse political funding in a scenario where donors are reluctant to reveal identity.
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New Delhi: During the debate on Finance Bill in Rajya Sabha on Wednesday, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that the new bill will cleanse political funding in a scenario where donors are reluctant to reveal identity.
He added that Finance Bill protects the source of information for tax evasion and will share information for calling a tax raid only with the courts.
Jaitley informed the upper house that political funding is allowed by cheque.
However, the main opposition party Congress alleged that the current system helps the ruling party. Jaitley, nevertheless, refuted the claims completely.
Following are the highlights of the Finance Bill 2017:
CASH TRANSACTIONS
The bill lowers the maximum size of cash transactions to 200,000 rupees from 300,000 rupees, proposed earlier in the budget.
Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia tweeted that anyone who accepts cash transactions above that limit will face a penalty. It is not clear whether the fine will be equal to the entire transaction value or will be equal to the amount exceeding the permissible limit.
In November, Modi decided to scrap high-value currency notes of 500 and 1,000 rupees, accounting for 86 percent of the cash in circulation.
Also Read: Finance Bill 2017 passed in Lok Sabha: Key highlights you should know
TAX EVASION
The bill makes it mandatory for income tax returns to be filed along with Aadhaar -- a 12-digit identity number issued to more than 1 billion people.
The government has already decided to link payouts such as welfare benefits to the Aadhaar database as a means to rein in fraud and corruption.
ELECTORAL BONDS
The government proposes incentives for political donations to be paid through digital payments and cheques as part of its efforts to clean up funding in Indian politics. Cash donations have been capped at 2,000 rupees.
Reserve Bank of India will be able to authorise smaller banks to issue electoral bonds -- which can be bought by cheque or digital payments -- for funding political parties and election campaigns.
LOWERING TAX
Corporate tax has been cut by 5 percent to 25 percent for small firms with annual turnover of up to 500 million rupees to boost investment.
The rate of personal income tax on annual incomes of 250,000 to 500,000 rupees is lowered to 5 percent from 10 percent. A 15 percent surcharge will be imposed on tax on annual income of over 1 million rupees.
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
The bill proposes tax exemptions for real estate developers if they complete their projects in five years -- up from the previous three years.
The Finance Bill will exempt start-ups from paying income tax for any three consecutive years out of initial seven years after incorporation.The government also plans to merge eight quasi-judicial tribunals covering cyber security, telecom, aviation, industrial disputes and copyright into one, cutting administrative flab.
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