Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is betting that local firms will pass on the corporate tax cuts to customers in the form of lower prices to stimulate demand.
India’s
decision to cut corporate taxes may benefit from lessons learned in
the United States.
A
recent study suggests that the rise in US business investment since
the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in late 2017 isn’t
necessarily due to the cut in the corporate tax rate from 35 per cent
to 21 per cent, which aimed to lower the cost of capital. The paper
published by the International
Monetary Fund puts forth a simpler reason: investment has been
rising because domestic demand was boosted by lower personal taxes
and higher government spending.
India
hasn’t decided on cuts to personal taxes, Finance Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman said at a briefing on Sunday. She is betting that local
firms will pass on the corporate
tax cuts to customers in the form of lower prices to stimulate
demand.
While
certain types of firms, such as consumer goods makers, might do so,
the bulk of listed companies are already sitting on manufacturing
slack and would prefer to reduce debt rather than build factories or
hire more workers, Neelkanth Mishra, India strategist at Credit
Suisse Group AG, told BloombergQuint.
Indian
firms won’t necessarily use the tax cuts to return cash to
shareholders -- unlike their U.S. peers -- but fresh investments
could take time, according to A. Vaidheesh, managing director at
GlaxoSmithKline Plc’s Indian unit.
“The
current slowdown cycle is different from the 2012-13 slowdown as the
consumption demand is also significantly constrained,” said Madhavi
Arora, an economist at Edelweiss Securities Ltd. “Therefore a
broader tax cut covering all economic agents would have probably
yielded better economic returns.”
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