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Thursday July 8, 3:00 PM
10 key measures that affect you
No tax
for individuals whose taxable income is up to Rs 100,000. Tax slabs otherwise remain the same. This measure seems in line with the Kelkar committee recommendations.
An education cess of 2% will add marginally to your tax liability.
Long-term capital gains from the stock markets reduced to zero. Short-term capital
gains rate is now at a flat 10%.
However, you have to now pay 0.15% of your transaction value as a levy when you
buy any stock. However, when you sell a stock there is no such levy. It will
increase your share transaction cost (Rs 150 per transaction of Rs 100,000) while buying.
Computers may get cheaper as excise duty has been abolished on it.
All imports of gadgets, equipment etc. for the handicapped will not attract any
customs or excise duty henceforth.
Gifts above Rs 25,000 will be taxed as income if it is received from people
other than blood relations. However, gifts received on occasions like marriage
will continue to be tax exempt.
Rates of small savings instruments like PPF, GPF and special deposit scheme to
continue at 8%. A 9% Senior citizens savings scheme will also be introduced.
LIC's Varishtha Jeevan Beema Yojana howeveer, will be discontinued.
Service tax has been hiked from 8% to 10%. So, services such as stock broking,
travel tours, pandaals, and hotel rates will get marginally costlier.
Debt mutual funds will have to continue to withhold 12.5% of the income
distributed to unit holders. In effect, the effective income in a debt
mutual fund individual investor’s hand continues to get pruned by 12.5%.
The budget 2004-05 was largely focused on the agriculture and small-scale sector.
However, this was not at the cost of the infrastructure focus built up by
the previous government (hike in FDI limits in telecom, aviation and insurance).
Many forward looking schemes to generate rural India happiness have been announced.
However, past record of executing those schemes has found us wanting.
The finance minister tinkered a little here and there, but largely stuck to
the ensuring stability in tax rates. Expectations of bold tax reforms based
on Kelkar committee recommendations were dashed. But atleast a continuity
with the past has been maintained.
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