The LTCG-related announcements made in the Budget are thought to have been significantly rolled back by these revisions
Nirmala Sitharaman with red 'Bahi Khata'/ Pallav Paliwal
The government has proposed significant relief for taxpayers in terms of capital gains tax on real estate properties, giving them the option of paying a 20 per cent tax rate with indexation or a 12.5 per cent tax rate without indexation.
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According to the amendments to the Finance Bill, 2024, circulated to Lok Sabha members, an individual or HUF purchasing a home before July 23, 2024, can compute his taxes under the new scheme of 12.5 per cent without indexation and the old scheme of 20 per cent with indexation, and pay the lower of the two.
Major relief proposed in the Finance Bill in respect of taxation of immovable property. In the case of the transfer of a long-term capital asset, being land or building or both, by an individual or HuF, which is acquired before the 23rd day of July 2024, the taxpayer can compute…
— ANI (@ANI) August 6, 2024
The LTCG-related announcements made in the Budget are thought to have been significantly rolled back by these revisions, the reports stated.
Meanwhile, Congress MP Amar Singh attacked the Union Budget for 2024–25 in the Lok Sabha, saying it fails to address unemployment, raises household out-of-pocket costs, and provides no help to the middle and salaried classes. Singh pointed out that individual income tax makes up 19 per cent of overall tax collection, while corporate tax makes up 17 per cent, and accused the government of taxing the poor while ignoring the rich.
Singh asked the finance minister to increase public consumption and decrease poverty by exempting incomes up to Rs 5 lakh. He questioned the efficiency of corporate tax breaks in creating jobs, pointing out that India needs to create over 7.85 million jobs a year in the non-farm sector until 2030, according to the Economic Survey.
Singh also brought up the fact that household savings have fallen to an all-time low of 18.3 per cent and financial liabilities are at an all-time high, indicating a burden on daily spending. In addition, he voiced concerns about the 10% food inflation rate and the poor yield from agriculture, even though 50 per cent of the population depends on it.