7th CPC Hikes funding through Income Declaration Scheme -II: Report
IDS-II to fund Pay Commission hikes, PSU bank recap: BofA-ML
NEW DELHI: The second income disclosure scheme (IDS) will help contain
the 2017-18 fiscal deficit at 3.5 per cent of GDP, same as the current
financial year, even while funding 7th Pay Commission hikes and
recapitalisation of state-owned banks, says a report.
According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofA-ML), the second income
disclosure scheme (IDS-II) will fetch about Rs 1,000 billion (Rs 1 lakh
crore)/0.7 per cent of GDP in additional taxes.
"This should allow Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to hold the FY18
fiscal deficit at 3.5 per cent of GDP - same as FY17's - and at the same time
fund the 7th Pay Commission and recapitalise PSU banks, without cutting back on
public capex," it said.
The government announced on December 16 IDS-II which will run till March
31. Under this scheme, black money hoarders can come clean by paying 50 per
cent tax on bank deposits of junk currencies made post demonetisation.
For those holding unaccounted cash, it offered new tax evasion amnesty
scheme wherein 50 per cent tax will be charged on declarations and quarter of
the total sum be parked in a non-interest bearing deposit for four years.
The global brokerage firm noted the demonetisation shock looks set to
spill over to January and perhaps, even February.
"We estimate that each month of disruption costs 0.3-0.5 per cent
of GDP. This reinforces the 80 bps cut to 6.9 per cent in our FY17 growth
forecast," the report said adding that a 25 bps rate cut is likely on
February 8 as old series GDP growth is already struggling at 4.5 per
cent.
On December 7, RBI kept interest rate unchanged despite calls for
lowering it while slashing the economic growth projection by half a per cent to
7.1 in the first policy review post demonetisation.
The next monetary policy meet is on February 8.
Read at: Economic Times
Read at: Economic Times
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