• Sign Up
  • |
  • Sign In Sign Out
  • |
  • Make us your home
  • |
  • RSS
1 2
1 15
1 4
1 9
1 13
1 14
IPO
1 25
1 5018
SME
1 5018
Govt raises MAT to 15%
Press Trust of India
Monday, July 06, 2009 (New Delhi)
The government today raised the Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) to 15 per cent even as it abolished the Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) and Commodities Transaction Tax (CTT).

The government did not change the corporate tax rates.

Unveiling the budget for 2009-10, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said, "MAT was introduced to address inequity in taxation of corporate taxpayers. In the quest for greater equity, I propose to increase the rate of MAT to 15 per cent of book profit from the present rate of 10 per cent."

MAT is the amount companies pay as tax on their book profits.

However, the minister granted some relief to companies, allowing them to adjust their tax liability under MAT from seven years to 10 years.

Announcing the decision of the government to do away with the FBT, he said, "this tax has been perceived as imposing considerable compliance burden. Empathising with these sentiments, I propose to abolish the fringe benefit tax."

FBT was imposed by the then Finance Minister P Chidambaram in 2005 on the value of certain fringe benefits provided by employers to their employees.


"I am disappointed with the Budget.
The shipping and shipbuilding
industry generates a lot of revenues
and employment. But it finds no mention
of the sector in the Budget."
PC Kapoor, Managing Director of
Bharati Shipyard
 
Recession & U
Can Pranab Mukherjee's Budget rescue Indian economy from the devastating global recession?
 
 
 
 
 
Poll
Sectoral Impact
Photos
And they say...

 
Aam Admi Budget