The
government is unlikely to change the financial year to January-December, though
it is considering whether it could further advance the date of the presentation
of the Budget by a fortnight or so.
The
government this year presented the Budget on February 1, departing from the
British-era practice of announcing Budget proposals on February 28.
India
currently follows April-March financial year, again a 150-year-old tradition
dating back to British rule.
The
government had been mulling a shift to January-December financial year and set
up a committee to deliberate the issue.
Finance
minister Arun Jaitley had on July 21 in a written reply to a question in the
Lok Sabha said, "the matter of changing financial year is under
consideration of the government".
"For
now (2018-19), changing the financial year appears unlikely," a senior
government official told ET, adding that switching this year would mean the
budget would have to be presented by end of October or early November, which is
unrealistic.
In
addition, there is a is thinking that as a big change in taxation — the GST —
has been rolled out, it will take some time to settle down. The GST rollout was
preceded by the demonetisation exercise. Change in financial year at this
juncture will add to the disruption.
As
elections are scheduled to be held in 2019, experts believe that the government
will not change the financial year then as well.
There
have been divergent views on aligning the financial year with the calendar
year.
A
committee under former chief economic advisor Shankar Acharya was set up in
July, 2016 to look at the feasibility of the idea. The panel, however, did not
find much merit in the idea.
A
NITI Aayog discussion note, on the other hand, said a change in the financial
year was required as the current system leads to sub-optimal utilisation of
working season. The financial year is not aligned with international practices
and it impacted data collection and dissemination from the perspective of
national accounts.
A
parliamentary panel also recommended shifting the financial year to
January-December.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, subsequently, at the NITI Aayog governing council
meeting on April 23 this year asked the states to "take initiatives in
regard of advancing the financial year from January to December",
following which Madhya Pradesh announced its intent to change the financial
year.
While
a change in the financial year period for now appears unlikely, advancing the
date of the budget is a possibility. The government is happy with the outcome
of an early budget this year. It enabled front loading of government spending
and its capital spending went up by 58 % in the first two months of 2017-18 as
compared to the corresponding period of the previous year.
Source:-The
Economic Times
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