Pharma industry wants budget to offer tax clarity

The industry players also want the government to provide a road map towards bringing down corporate income tax down to 25 per cent.

NEW DELHI: The pharmaceutical industry has asked the government to bring in more clarity in terms of tax structure and provide incentives on research and development (R&D) as part of its budget wish-list.

The industry players also want the government to provide a road map towards bringing down corporate income tax down to 25 per cent.

The Indian Drug Manufacturers Association (IDMA), a body comprising mostly home-grown pharma firms, said all excisable goods used for R&D purposes should be exempted from central excise duty.

"Introduce parity in the input (12 per cent) and output (6 per cent) rate of excise duty for pharmaceutical products," it said.

The association has also suggested that the government allow utilisation of CENVAT credit for payment of service tax on reverse charge basis.

On the other hand, the Organisation of Pharmaceutical Producers of India (OPPI), representing mainly MNC pharma firms, said that with innovation being high on the government agenda, clarity must be provided for incentives under the National Intellectual Property Policy.
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"As innovator company, we look forward to this with great excitement. However, greater clarity (is needed) on what elements will be considered for preferential tax incentives, whether it will apply to outsourced R&D, etc. Incentives are also necessary to boost manufacturing capacity of APIs, rather than depend on Chinese imports," OPPI Director General Kanchana TK told PTI.

She further said the industry is looking forward to the end of the inverted duty structure as and when GST is implemented.

"We expect that with GST, the inverted duty structure that our industry has to deal with will become a thing of the past. This year, we hope that greater clarity will be provided on whether input tax credits will be refunded if unutilised at the end of the assessment year," Kanchana added.

In the past, the government said it would bring the corporate income tax down to 25 per cent. OPPI expects to see a road map on this, she added.
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IDMA also took the line that exemption of central excise duty for physician samples as in line with exemption from levy of VAT is the need of the hour.

Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed) has called on the government to utilise the budget to send out a positive message to global investors.
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"If India wants to be globally competitive and become more self-sufficient, it should send a positive message to global investors that it is open to business," Varun Khanna, Chairman, AdvaMed India, Working Group and Executive Committee, said.

The Medical Technology Association of India (MTaI) called for a rollback of "high Customs duties" on medical devices.

"For products where the ability to import substitute is still far away, the high Custom duties should be rolled back," MTaI Director General Pavan Choudary said.

He said import duties on medical devices and equipment have already been increased by 7.3 per cent for most items. Most of them fell in the 11.6 per cent bracket, which has gone up to 18.9 per cent now, effectively a duty increase of 62.7 per cent.

Through Customs duty increases, which are almost passed on to patients, the cost for patients is expected to go up, Choudary said.
What India Inc expects from Budget 2017
1/7
On February 1, Finance minister Arun Jaitley is expected to present a tax-payer friendly 2017 Union Budget, given the fact that it comes within months of demonetisation.

With just few days to go for the annual financial plan, the Indian corporate sector has already started gearing up for it.

Here are some of the major expectations of India's business tycoons from budget 2017:
On February 1, Finance minister Arun Jaitley is expected to present a tax-payer friendly 2017 Union Budget, given the fact that it comes within months of demonetisation. With just few days to go for..
Read More
Naina Lal Kidwai, Former President at Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry(FICCI), said growth should be a key element of Budget 2017 going forward.

She said: "I don't know how the robustness will stay in terms of overall numbers even while compliance goes up. So, near term clear impact is an issue. However, what we can hope for is that it clearly requires that growth is kick started again."

"Anything that goes into public sector spending which this government did extremely well in its first year, pushed a lot of GDP growth into the system. The second would be anything again to do with jobs because people who have lost jobs in the formal sector are going into NREGA and these pockets must see some benefits. And the third would be anything which helps consumption because that will help production come back," she added.
Naina Lal Kidwai, Former President at Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry(FICCI), said growth should be a key element of Budget 2017 going forward. She said: "I don't know how the..
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Adi Godrej, CMD at Godrej Consumer Products Limited, said GST will lead to tremendous boost in FMCG demand. It will, of course, lead to general boost to GDP growth in the country, as well, he said.

He said: "I expect individual tax rates will also be reduced and I think exemption levels will be increased in this budget because the government's fiscal position will be excellent for the next year. Of course, they don't have the exact numbers yet but there will be a tremendous collection from the huge deposits that have come in post demonetisation in to the banks. Many of them would lead to higher rates of taxes and the government collections in my view should be good."
Adi Godrej, CMD at Godrej Consumer Products Limited, said GST will lead to tremendous boost in FMCG demand. It will, of course, lead to general boost to GDP growth in the country, as well, he said. ..
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Kishore Biyani, Group CEO at Future Group, said that he's looking forward more to the GST than the budget, and in the budget, the government incentivising consumption is something which he is looking forward to.

"We are hoping for the GST more than the budget and in the budget, the government incentivising consumption is something which we are looking forward to. The savings rate interest might come down and consumption might be encouraged and that is what we are looking forward to," Biyani said.
Kishore Biyani, Group CEO at Future Group, said that he's looking forward more to the GST than the budget, and in the budget, the government incentivising consumption is something which he is looking..
Read More
Sunil Subramaniam, CEO at Sundaram Mutual, said the rural economy, infrastructure and banks riding piggyback will benefit from the budget thrust of the government.

"... the biggest challenge for the government is employment generation over two - three years. So, mega projects supporting employment generation in a big way will be a focus. The rural sector (will be a focus) partly because the two big states going to the elections -- Punjab and UP...And the third thing is the government's strong urge to make the demonetisation look successful."

"If you look at it from that perspective, they will definitely want to do a wide-ranging set of stuff which partly Modi announced on December 31st but they will carry through that momentum and there will be a lot of positive impact on several sectors," he added.
Sunil Subramaniam, CEO at Sundaram Mutual, said the rural economy, infrastructure and banks riding piggyback will benefit from the budget thrust of the government. "... the biggest challenge for the..
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Harish Krishnan, Senior vice president and Fund Manager Equity at Kotak MF, said the domestic cycle is in a far better shape than the global cycle and therefore he would orient his portfolios more towards companies and sectors which are part of the domestic cycle.

"The government is possibly the only one with significant purse strings to loosen up at this point of time and our sense is that more of the allocation towards both infra and rural sector could well be on the way, given the chances that the government might want to try and appease these sections. That would be the other space that we are looking out for," Krishnan said.
Harish Krishnan, Senior vice president and Fund Manager Equity at Kotak MF, said the domestic cycle is in a far better shape than the global cycle and therefore he would orient his portfolios more to..
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R Sreesankar, head institutional equities at Prabhudas Lilladher, believes this will be a government spending budget, especially because the country's November Index of Industrial Production and manufacturing took a hit.

"And if you don't see the capacity utilisation of the industries moving up, I don't expect a large amount of private investments. So, it will be the government spending which will drive the economic growth going forward and to facilitate that kind of growth, what will be the sops that will be there in the budget that is going to be key," Sreesankar said.
R Sreesankar, head institutional equities at Prabhudas Lilladher, believes this will be a government spending budget, especially because the country's November Index of Industrial Production and manu..
Read More
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