To meet a
budget crunch, taxes on income, capital gains and dividends have gone up in the
US, and may rise further. This has fed speculation that the Indian budget will
follow suit. There is also speculation that Chidambaram will introduce an
inheritance tax, as in the US.
Some Indian
analysts think that soaking the rich will win votes in an election year, though
there's no evidence for this. Other analysts say a high tax on the super-rich
will largely be evaded through trusts and other legal forms of tax avoidance,
and will not fetch much revenue. The biggest tax evaders are small businessmen
earning Rs 5-20 lakh per year, so the focus should be on brining them into the
tax net. A hefty tax on high incomes, it is argued, may disturb investors whom
the government is trying to enthuse.
This debate
misses a key question: what is our longterm tax vision? Should our tax rates be
aligned with those in ASEAN countries, or the US? I say we must go the ASEAN
way. That means gradually cutting our taxes rates to ASEAN's lower levels, not
raising them (save maybe temporarily).
Budget
problems in the US are totally different from those in India. The US has been
badly hit by demographic change. Earlier, its baby-boom generation contributed
more in taxes than it took out. But now the boomers are retiring, and will take
out much more (through Medicare as well as Social Security) than the next
generation will put in. Both George W Bush and Obama have greatly increased
health entitlements . So, total US spending on three items — Social Security ,
Medicare and Medicaid (for the poor) — is projected to skyrocket from around 8
per cent of GDP today to 18 per cent by 2025. This is the crisis Obama has to
tackle.
India,
however, has excellent demographic prospects. The proportion of Indians in the
working age group 15-60 will rise by up to 300 million over the next two
decades. This means buoyant tax receipts. If economic reforms ensure that their
productivity keeps rising, fast growth will add to the revenue boom. That's exactly
what happened in ASEAN's boom years: a rising workforce and fast growth helped
raise both living and social standards. This was growth with social justice.
India should follow the same path.
Recall
Chidambaram's vision in his so-called dream budget of 1997. He said India
should aim over time to align its tax rates with those in ASEAN countries.
These were fellow-developing countries that had achieved miracle growth of 7
per cent for decades, and hence clearly had tax systems worth replicating. They
were also competitors of India in export markets, so in a globalising world
India needed to ensure its tax regime was competitive with ASEAN's .
Singapore,
the biggest ASEAN success, has a top income tax rate of 20 per cent (including
dividends) and corporate tax rate of 17 per cent. It has no tax on wealth,
inheritance or capital gains. In most other ASEAN countries there is no tax on
wealth or inheritance. Both the peak income tax rate and corporate tax rate are
around 25 per cent or less. Tax rates on capital gains vary from zero to 25 per
cent.
The contrast
with the US could not be greater. ASEAN countries aim to get tax revenue out of
rapid GDP growth and improving demographics (more people in the workforce).
They do not face the US problem of a doubling of welfare outgo on account of
worsening demographics and slow growth. This is why ASEAN countries have a much
friendlier tax regime, one that attracts people and capital, and thus ensures
growth with social justice.
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