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Sitharaman’s fourth Budget in a row neither tinkered with tax slabs nor raised the standard deduction, which was widely expected in view of elevated inflation levels and the impact of the pandemic on the middle class.
”If the expectation was to raise tax, I haven’t done that,” she said at a post-Budget press conference when asked about the Budget belying expectations of the middle class.
”I hadn’t done that (raise income tax rates) last year (and) this year too,” she said. ”I have not collected a single rupee additionally through tax burden.” She said last year the Prime Minister directed that fiscal deficit should not be a concern during COVID-19 and ”there should not be additional tax burden during the pandemic”.
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”We have not attempted to address the challenges caused by pandemic by increasing tax,” she added.
While the standard deduction on personal income remains unchanged at Rs 50,000, there was no change in income tax slabs in the Budget unveiled on Tuesday.
The corporate tax rate too was kept at the same level. However, the concessional rate of 15 per cent has been extended for newly incorporated manufacturing units.
”There are times when you can give. There are times when you have to wait… But a lot of things have been done for the middle class,” she said, as she narrated the ripple effect the spending on infrastructure, rural and agri economy and housing will have in generating additional income for the middle class.
Middle class across the board have been given relief, she said, citing measures announced for MSMEs, affordable homes, senior citizens and retail investors.