India cuts corporate taxes to boost manufacturing
India cut corporate tax rates on Friday in a surprise move designed to woo manufacturers, revive private investment and lift growth from a six-year low that has led to major job losses and fueled discontent in the countryside.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, under pressure to make good on a promise to deliver growth and tens of thousands of jobs, said the lower tax rates would spur new investment and drive his “Make In India” plan to boost domestic manufacturing.
“The step to cut corporate tax is historic. It will give a great stimulus to #MakeInIndia, attract private investment from across the globe, improve competitiveness of our private sector, create more jobs and result in a win-win for 1.3 billion Indians,” Modi said on Twitter.
The cut in the headline corporate tax rate to 22 percent from 30 percent was widely cheered by Indian equity markets. The benchmark index posted its biggest intraday gain in more than a decade to end more than 5 percent higher.
“The measures announced by the finance minister this morning can be described as a ‘New Deal’ for the Indian economy,” said VK Vijayakumar, chief investment strategist at Geojit Financial Services. “The psychological stimulus from this ... will be higher than the fiscal stimulus.”
Modi is headed to the United States this weekend where he will showcase India as an attractive destination for investment at a rally organized by Indian-Americans which US President Donald Trump is set to attend.
Modi is also due to discuss investment opportunities with executives from US bank JPMorgan Chase, aerospace company Lockheed Martin Mastercard and the world’s biggest retailer Walmart.
The new corporate tax rate for domestic companies, excluding surcharges, makes India more competitive than neighboring Bangladesh and puts it almost on par with Vietnam and Thailand, countries that have wooed businesses affected by the US-China trade dispute.
“The move will make Indian companies globally competitive, and allow global companies a good option for growing their manufacturing base in-country,” said Mukesh Aghi, president of the US-India Strategic Partnership Forum.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said India’s effective corporate tax rate would be lowered to about 25 percent.
She said that would put India on a par with Asian peers and the rate would be as low as 22 percent if companies did not seek any other special tax incentives.
Any manufacturing companies incorporated on or after Oct. 1 would be eligible for a 17 percent tax rate, with the condition that they start production by March 2023, said Sitharaman, speaking from the coastal state of Goa.
Foreign firms that have Indian subsidiaries or joint ventures with Indian companies would also enjoy the lower corporate tax rates, Sitharaman said.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das said the moves augur “extremely well” for the economy.
“These are definitely very bold and welcome measures,” he said at a forum. “These tax rates take us closer to the tax rates which prevail in this part of the world.”
The broad NSE index nd the benchmark BSE index closed 5.3 percent higher. The rupee INR=D4 rose as much as 0.9 percent to 70.68 against the dollar, its strongest since Aug. 9.
Separately, India’s goods and services tax (GST) council made tweaks to taxes on Friday, but avoided slashing taxes on automobiles despite lobbying by industry executives in one of the industry’s worst downturns.
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