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Illustration: Binay Sinha
The government’s ambitious employment-linked incentive schemes and the internship programme announced in the 2024-25 Budget are not enshrined as rights, and the private sector will only be nudged to adopt them, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Wednesday.
When asked whether the underwhelming performance of the Bharatiya Janata Party in the just concluded general elections was a reason for the massive push for job creation in the economy, Sitharaman denied it, holding that election issues are not common across the country. “Some issues are across a couple of states, some other issues are across a couple of other states. So no one issue runs across all the states,” she added.
On the comprehensive review of the income tax act promised in the Budget, Sitharaman said a committee will look into the matter without revealing its composition. “I am not going to direct anything to them. Whether they want to take that (direct tax code), whether they want to go back as far as the Parthasarathi Shome (report). It’s up to them,” she added.
On the labour intensive production-linked incentive (PLI) schemes, like for leather, footwear, and toys for which token allocations were made in the Interim Budget, not finding mention in the full Budget, Sitharaman said they have not been abandoned. “As and when the proposals come to me, that window is open,” she said.
On the increase in long-term capital gain tax on financial assets to 12.5 per cent from 10 per cent, Sitharaman said that is only an effort to rationalise rates across asset classes.
When asked if the future Budgets would give a greater priority to education and health than infrastructure, the FM spoke about the need to revive the economy during Covid19 through infrastructure projects. She however stressed that areas like education and health have never been ignored.
And, was this her toughest Budget? Not really, she said.
First Published: Jul 24 2024 | 11:57 PM IST
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