Reacting to the
Union Budget 2016-17, Mr. Hemant Kanoria
CMD, Srei
Infrastructure Finance Limited
Mr. Hemant Kanoria
Chairman and
Managing Director
Srei Infrastructure
Finance Limited
Great Boost For
Agriculture, But Tepid For Infrastructure
"This is the
first budget in decades which has rightly given an 'implementation' based
thrust to agriculture and rural segments. I think the specifics covered are
practical and will surely yield results. It is not only about vision, but would
actually act as a booster for the economy, covering the largest segment of our
country’s population. However, I have not been enthused with the announcements
pertaining to infrastructure, not because it has been neglected, but it does
not have the specificity for implementation, unlike agriculture," said Mr.
Hemant Kanoria, Chairman & Managing Director,Srei Infrastructure Finance
Limited, reacting to the Union Budget 2016-17.
"This budget
has not only substantially enhanced the outlay for agriculture, it is also
replete with many well thought through measures that address almost each and
every aspect in the entire agri value chain right from irrigation to credit
enhancement to procurement of agri-produce to market access or usage of digital
platform to reach out to larger sections of the rural population. Add to that,
the outlay allocated for building rural infrastructure. I feel this would
provide considerable fillip to demand generation at the rural level and would
also open up entrepreneurship opportunities. The rural sector will also largely
benefit from the social sector schemes. The move to open up marketing of food
products produced and manufactured in India to 100% FDI deserves special
mention," added Mr. Kanoria, elaborating on the budget measures for
agriculture and rural development.
"Focus has also
been given to entrepreneurship encouragement, development, financing and
support. These have been requests that we have been making to the government
since quite some time. It is heartening to see the response and its
manifestation in the budget document. We have to develop millions of
entrepreneurs in our country to create opportunities for the youth," said
Mr. Kanoria.
"The
infrastructure sector, which is the backbone of the economy, has been
addressed, but the announcements will take a long time for implementation. The
proposals to introduce a Bill on resolution of disputes, to form new guidelines
for renegotiation of PPP concession agreements and to have a new credit rating
system for infrastructure projects are steps in the right direction, but an
immediate time-frame for implementation should have been articulated. PPP in
infrastructure must be put back on track and we have already lost precious
time. Low-cost housing is likely to get a boost from the measures announced.
Reforms in FDI policy for Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs) and enabling a
sponsor of an ARC to hold up to 100% stake in ARC is a welcome move as this is
one area where we need more specialist players," elaborated Mr. Kanoria,
while commenting on the impact of the budget on the infrastructure sector.
"I welcome
Hon’ble Finance Minister’s decision to restrict categorization of budget
expenditure as Revenue and Capital expenditures and move away from Plan and
Non-plan expenditures. This will assist in portraying a clearer picture of
which of the expenditure items are productive and which are not," felt Mr.
Kanoria.
"However, the
issues on 'ease of doing business' and 'tax simplification and streamlining'
seem to have escaped the notice of the Hon'ble Finance Minister in the milieu
of issues. The corporate sector will not have much to rejoice for. The
additional Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) beyond a certain amount of dividend,
trebling of Securities Transaction Tax (STT) for options, the introduction of
new cesses in certain categories are some of the steps which are unlikely to go
down well. Determination of residency of foreign company on the basis of Place
of Effective Management (POEM) stands deferred by one year while General Anti
Avoidance Rules (GAAR) is to be made effective from FY18. When we need foreign
investment, these steps may not be sending out the right signal to
international investors, especially when the issue of Retrospective Taxation
has already created quite a controversy. Allowing NBFCs to be eligible for
deduction of up to 5% of their income in respect of provision for bad and
doubtful debts is a positive move, although it is still not at par with
banks," added Mr. Kanoria.
"I was quite
surprised that the defence sector was almost entirely overlooked. When this
sector is supposed to be an integral part of the ‘Make in India’ programme, I
was expecting certain measures to be announced in this budget aimed at
stimulating domestic production of defence equipment," felt Mr. Kanoria.
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