Rejecting fears of the corporate tax reduction impacting revenue collection, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Monday told Parliament that the gross direct tax collection had increased by 5 per cent till November.
Sitharaman was responding to the query of Nationalist Congress Party member Supriya Sule, during discussions in the Lok Sabha on the Taxation Law Amendment Bill, 2019, as to how the government was going to manage the corporate tax rate cuts if the direct tax collection has substantially dropped.
The Minister categorically said that there was no decrease in direct tax collection. "In fact, there is an increase of 5 per cent in the gross direct tax collection till November this fiscal."
She also noted that the maximum collection of direct taxes happens in the last quarter of the fiscal.
Increased investment
Sitharaman clarified that the objective to reduce corporate tax is only to attract investment, stimulate growth and also to create job opportunities.
The result of the move is that several domestic and global companies have expressed interest in investment, she said.
Banks have disbursed about Rs 2.5 lakh crore during their recent outreach programme and Rs 1.5 lakh crore of the amount was fresh term loans, the Minister said.
Against the backdrop of industrialist Rahul Bajaj's comments that India Inc was afraid of criticising the government, Sitharaman said it is "unfair to say that government is not willing to listen to criticism".