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As
per AY 2008-09 Dividends
that are distributed attract a tax of 15 per cent. Short term
capital gains attract a tax of 10 per cent under Section 111A. There
is merit in equating the rates and hence increased the rate of tax
on short term capital gains under Section 111A and Section 115AD to
15 per cent. This encourages investors to stay invested for a longer
term.
STT paid will be treated like any other deductible expenditure
against business income. Further, the levy of STT, in the case of
options, is to be only on the option premium where the option is not
exercised, and the liability to be on the seller. In a case where
the option is exercised, the levy is to be on the settlement price
and the liability will be on the buyer. There will be no change in
the present rates.
Commodities Transaction Tax (CTT) introduced on the same lines as
STT on options and futures. |
| For
the Assessment Year 2007-08 |
The
undermentioned assets is brought under the scope of capital assets
and has been excluded from the scope of personal effects:
- Archeological collections
- Paintings
- Drawings
- Sculptures
- Any work of art
Ceiling prescribed for investment in Long-Term Specified Bonds
(LTSB) for claiming the exemption of long-term capital gains:
- All the capital gains arising
from transfer of any long-term capital assets is exempt if such
gains are invested in Long-Term Specified Bonds. From April 1,
2007, ceiling of Rs 5 million has been stipulated for
investments in such bonds made during any financial year.
- Notifying of such bonds in
Official Gazette is dispensed. Bond issued by NHAI or by REC on
or after 01.04.07 & redeemable after three years will be
LTSB. Bond issued between 01.04.06 & 31.03.07 will be deemed
to be LTSB.
|
| |
Short-term
Capital gains tax |
Long-term
capital gains tax |
| Sale
transactions of securities which attracts STT:- |
10% |
NIL |
| Sale
transaction of securities not attracting STT:- |
|
|
| Individuals
(resident and non-residents) |
Progressive
slab rates |
20%
with indexation;
10% without indexation (for units/ zero coupon bonds) |
| Partnerships
(resident and non-resident) |
30% |
| Individuals
(resident and non-residents) |
30% |
| Overseas
financial organisations specified in section 115AB |
40%
(corporate)
30% (non-corporate) |
10% |
| FIIs |
30% |
10% |
| Other
Foreign companies |
40% |
20%
with indexation;
10% without indexation (for units/ zero coupon bonds) |
| Local
authority |
30% |
| Co-operative
society |
Progressive
slab rates |
A capital gain is income derived from the
sale of an investment. A capital investment can be a home, a farm, a
ranch, a family business, or a work of art, for instance. In most years
slightly less than half of taxable capital gains are realized on the
sale of corporate stock. The capital gain is the difference between the
money received from selling the asset and the price paid for it.
"Capital gains" tax is really a misnomer. It would be more
appropriate to call it the "capital formation" tax. It is a
tax penalty imposed on productivity, investment, and capital
accumulation.
The capital gains tax is different from almost all other forms of
taxation in that it is a voluntary tax. Since the tax is paid only when
an asset is sold, taxpayers can legally avoid payment by holding on to
their assets--a phenomenon known as the "lock-in effect."
There are many unfairnesses imbedded in the current tax treatment of
capital gains. One is that capital gains are not indexed for inflation:
the seller pays tax not only on the real gain in purchasing power but
also on the illusory gain attributable to inflation. The inflation
penalty is one reason that, historically, capital gains have been taxed
at lower rates than ordinary income. In fact, "most capital gains
were not gains of real purchasing power at all, but simply represented
the maintenance of principal in an inflationary world."
Another unfairness of the tax is that individuals are permitted to
deduct only a portion of the capital losses that they incur, whereas
they must pay taxes on all of the gains. That introduces an unfriendly
bias in the tax code against risk taking. When taxpayers undertake risky
investments, the government taxes fully any gain that they realize if
the investment has a positive return. But the government allows only
partial tax deduction if the venture goes sour and results in a loss.
There is one other large inequity of the capital gains tax. It
represents a form of double taxation on capital formation. This is how
economists Victor Canto and Harvey Hirschorn explain the situation:
A government can choose to tax either the value of an asset or its
yield, but it should not tax both. Capital gains are literally the
appreciation in the value of an existing asset. Any appreciation
reflects merely an increase in the after-tax rateof return on the asset.
The taxes implicit in the asset's after-tax earnings are already fully
reflected in the asset's price or change in price. Any additional tax is
strictly double taxation.
Take, for example, the capital gains tax paid on a pharmaceutical
stock. The value of that stock is based on the discounted present value
of all of the future proceeds of the company. If the company is expected
to earn Rs.100,000 a year for the next 20 years, the sales price of the
stock will reflect those returns. The "gain" that the seller
realizes from the sale of the stock will reflect those future returns
and thus the seller will pay capital gains tax on the future stream of
income. But the company's future Rs.100,000 annual returns will also be
taxed when they are earned. So the Rs.100,000 in profits is taxed
twice--when the owners sell their shares of stock and when the company
actually earns the income. That is why many tax analysts argue that the
most equitable rate of tax on capital gains is zero. |