From a mind boggling 97.75 per cent as the highest tax rate and 11 tax slabs, to 30 per cent as the highest rate and three slabs, India and its taxpayers have come a long way since Independence. It is that time of the year again where many of our conversations are centered around what the finance minister is likely announce regarding income tax rates.
Even though every year expectations are high, not every Budget has many big bang tax reform announcements. In fact, a lot of them have been non-events. It has been some time since we have seen major changes in the direct tax structure - the last one was in 1997 when P Chidambaram was the Finance Minister. It was dubbed as the 'Dream Budget'.
Understandably, with this being an election year, the pressure is high for finance minister Arun Jaitley and his motley crew of finance ministry officials.
Although Jaitley left the tax slabs unchanged this year, here is how the tax slabs have evolved since Independence:
1949-50: This was the first time the tax rates were tinkered with in Independent India. The then finance minister, John Mathai reduced tax on incomes up to Rs 10,000 by a quarter of an anna, from one anna to nine pies in the first slab, and from two annas to "one nine pies" in the second slab. (An anna was a currency unit formerly used in India and Pakistan, and it is equal to 1/16 a rupee. It was divided into 4 paisa or 12 pies, thus there were 64 paise in a rupee and 192 pies).
1974-75: Y. B. Chavan cut the maximum marginal rate from an eye watering 97.75 per cent to 75 per cent. Taxes were lowered at all levels of personal incomes. Here is what he did: No income-tax for those earning up to Rs.6,000; marginal rate of basic income-tax was kept at 70 per cent on the income slab over Rs.70,000. The rate of surcharge was reduced to a uniform level of 10 per cent for all categories. The combined incidence of income-tax and surcharge would amount to 77 per cent of the taxable income in the highest slab. Wealth tax was increased.