Tax rationalisation, expenditure control to continue: Sinha
Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha on Monday expressed optimisim about higher growth during the next fiscal due to agriculture reforms and said the Centre will rationalise tax structure further to mop up higher revenues and maintain strict control over expenditure to bring down deficit.
"Long term growth in demand will come from the 70 per cent of the population who live in rural areas. That is why we laid emphasis on agriculture," Sinha said at a post-Budget meeting organised in New Delhi by the Confederation of Indian Industry.
Sinha, who had earlier stressed on over 7.0 per cent growth in the coming years, said the global ecomony was picking up and exports were also slated to go up resulting in higher GDP growth next fiscal.
Expressing firm commitment to reduce excise duty to 16 per cent Cenvat rate in two years and customs duties to 10 per cent for raw materials and 20 per cent for finished goods by
2004-05, Sinha said tax rates would come down further next fiscal.
Concerned over budget deficit, he said "I took the Fiscal Responsibility Bill to Parliament with the intention of reducing deficit by 0.5 per cent a year. I feel guilty of pegging fiscal deficit higher at 5.3 per cent for 2002-03."
Fiscal deficit soared to 5.7 per cent this year on account of shortfall in revenue and divestment, Sinha said.
"If India has to get over fiscal problems we have to look at revenues. Tax give-aways here and there will disturb the balance of the Budget. We will continue to have strict control over expenditure," Sinha said.
PTI
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