Bonanza for Speculators:
Securities Transaction Tax Turned Over
Kavaljit Singh
Under pressure from powerful lobby of brokers,
speculators, arbitrageurs and “noise traders,” Finance Minister, P.
Chidambaram, diluted several important provisions of the proposed securities
transaction tax (STT). For a detailed analysis of the proposed STT, see
Kavaljit Singh, Equitable Equity: India
Introduces Securities Transaction Tax, at this website).
It is important to note that Finance Minister has
not only reduced the tax rates but also offered differential tax rates for
different market players. In an announcement in the Parliament on July 21,
2004, he announced following amendments in the proposed STT regime:
1. The 0.15 per cent STT would
only be applicable on delivery-based trade in equity.
2. The 0.15 per cent STT on
delivery-based trading would be equally split between the buyer and the seller.
3. The STT rate for day
traders, arbitrageurs and “noise traders” has been reduced to a meager 0.015
per cent. Further, they would be allowed to take credit for the tax against
business tax on profits.
4. The STT rate for derivative
traders has been reduced to 0.010 per cent and they too would be allowed to
take credit for the tax against business tax on profits.
5. Trading in bonds, including
Government bonds, would be completely exempted from STT. In the same vein,
units of mutual funds (other than equity-oriented funds) would also be exempted
from STT.
Soon after amendments in the proposed STT regime
were announced, speculators and day traders got active in the markets and as a
result the stock indexes witnessed a massive surge within few minutes. The
reason being that such a massive dilution of tax regime was way beyond the
expectations of day-traders, speculators and other market players. By diluting
several provisions of the proposed STT regime, Finance Minister has not only
bowed to pressure from this powerful lobby but also given a clear signal that
the new government is fully subservient to the private interests of speculators
and day traders. No wonder, Finance Minister, who was hounded for introducing
the STT, became the darling of such market players soon after the announcement.
The major gainers of the revised STT proposals are
speculators, day traders, brokers, arbitrageurs and derivative traders who
indulge in large-scale speculative activity in the financial markets. Such a
preferential tax treatment to this community has legitimized their undesirable
speculative activities in the Indian financial markets.
What is distressing is that genuine investors who
carry out delivery-based transactions have been penalized with higher taxation.
Instead of taming speculative activities in the financial markets which diverts
large amounts of resources away from productive purposes, genuine investors
have been penalized. No explanation has been given for unfair treatment to
genuine investors.
It is a well-established fact that the depth of
financial markets is determined by the number of genuine investors (not
speculators) it is able to attract. It is the genuine investors (not
speculators) who are the life and blood of the financial markets. Particularly
in the case of
One of the biggest losers of the proposed amendments
would be the government itself, as there would a revenue loss of at least
Rs.25000 million. No one knows how the government would fill this revenue loss.
What is even more distressing is that Finance
Minister has not shown similar flexibility on his controversial proposal to
increase the limits of foreign direct investment on insurance,
telecommunications and civil aviation sectors. The proposed hike in foreign
investment in these sectors is strongly opposed by the left political parties,
which are supporting the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
government. It appears that Finance Minister is more submissive to the private
interests of speculators rather than its political allies.
With the proposed amendments, Finance Minister has
lost a golden opportunity to curb excessive speculation in the Indian financial
markets. Now it is very clear that the STT is not meant to curb excessive
speculation or raise revenues.
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