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0.3% slippage in fiscal deficit statistical in character: FM

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Hopeful of buoyant revenue collection next fiscal, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today said 0.3 per cent fiscal slippage is "statistical in character" and meeting the deficit target would be much easier in the future.

The anti-evasion measures being put in place will lead to higher compliance-level and see accounting for full 12 months' revenue from the Goods and Services Tax (GST) from next year.

"That will probably improve upon the collection and therefore meeting the fiscal deficit targets in coming years would be much easier than what it was in current year," he said.

Terming the 2017-18 fiscal as transformational year, he said, current year had several challenges.
 

"The non-tax revenues had a setback...for March (current fiscal) GST collections will come in April (next fiscal). So, for current year when people comment on so-called fiscal slippage, (they are) conveniently overlooking the fact that 12 months of expenditure and 11 months of GST," he said.

He said that the 0.3 per cent slippage in the fiscal deficit is on account of Rs 36,000 crore revenue shortfall for GST in March.

"So a large part of this slippage is statistical in character because of the absence of one month. Next year with the cycle completed, hopefully tax buoyancy will be higher. It has already reached a reasonable high level. It would be simpler than this year to probably meet those targets," he said.

The government has set a fiscal deficit target of 3.3 per cent of GDP in 2018-19, down from 3.5 per cent this fiscal.

On industry's complaint with regard to delay in the reduction of corporate tax to 25 per cent, Jaitley said, 7,000 companies which are left in 30 per cent bracket are effectively paying 22-23 per cent tax after taking into account the benefits of exemptions.

"At the moment no great prejudice is caused to them. When the exemptions phase themselves out, the potential to reduce (corporate tax) further could possibly increase," he said.

It was not an "easy deal" to remove exemptions retrospectively and so the government has decided to allow the exemptions to "die a natural death" as an when the sunset date sets in.

Making a case for pooling in of resources for healthcare sector, Jaitley said, the government in the past both at the level of central and states have taken several baby steps.

"Therefore, you needed a big steps in that movement. I think the health scheme that were announced is very ambitious," he said.

"Health scheme is one such example because resources of states topping up with resources of the Centre or the scheme of state and scheme of Centre running parallely instead of that, if we were able to coordinate with state that would be far better situation," he said.

He also said the government would expeditiously put loose ends together in the next couple of months.

The National Health Protection Scheme (NHPS) announced in the Budget touted as 'ModiCare' envisaged to provide medical cover of up to Rs 5 lakh to over 10 crore poor and vulnerable families, constituting 40 per cent of total population.

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First Published: Feb 05 2018 | 9:30 PM IST

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