Monday, May 14, 2007

Union Finance Budget for Financial Year 2007-2008, Government of India... (India is Shining)

Union Finance Minister (Govt. of India) P Chidambaram presented the Union Budget for 2007-08 in Parliament on Wednesday, 28th Feb. 2007.



The Following are the Highlights:



While Chidambaram kept income tax limit unchanged, he increased the threshold limit by Rs 10,000 giving every assessee a relief of Rs 1,000.



Deduction in respect of medical insurance under Section 80 (D) increased to Rs 15,000 and Rs 20,000 for senior citizens.



Exemption limit for women was increased to Rs 145,000 and for senior citizens to Rs 195,000.



Dividend distribution tax raised from 12.5 to 15 per cent.



ESOPs to be brought under FBT.



Expenditure on samples and free distribution items to be exempted from fringe benefit tax.



Additional revenue from direct taxes to yield Rs 3000 crore and indirect taxes revenue neutral.



Tax exemption on aviation turbine fuel sold to turbo prop aircraft extended to all small aircraft less than 40,000 kg.



Withdrawals by central and state governments exempted from Banking Cash Transaction Tax. The limit for individuals and HUF raised from Rs 25,000 to Rs 50,000.



Two lakh people to benefit out of service tax exemption. Govt to lose Rs 800 crore as a result.



Service tax on Residents Welfare Associations whose members contribute more than Rs 3,000.



Surcharge on Corporate income tax on companies below Rs one crore removed.



Tax free bonds to be issued by state-owned urban local bodies.



Five year tax holiday for two, three, four star hotels and convention centres with a seating capacity of 3,000 in NCT of Delhi, Gurgaon, Ghaziabad, Faridabad and Gautam



Minimum Alternate Tax being extended.



Benefits of investment in venture capital funds confined to IT, bio-technology, nano-technology, seed research, dairy among some others.



Excise duty on cement reduced from Rs.400 per tonne to Rs.350 per tonne for cement bags sold at Rs.190 per bag at retail market. Those sold above Rs.190 will attract excise duty of Rs.600 per tonne.



Corporate tax: No surcharge for firms with a taxable income of Rs 1 crore (Rs 10 million) or less.



E-governance allocation to be increased from Rs.395 to Rs.719 crore.



Indian investors to be allowed investment in overseas capital markets through mutual funds. Mutual funds to set up Infrastructure Fund schemes.



Any requirement for security of the nation to be provided.



Backward Regions Grant Fund to be raised to Rs 5800 crore.



A high-powered committee report aimed at making Mumbai a world class financial centre submitted.



Public suggestions will be invited.



Rs 50 crore provided to begin work on vocational education mission for which Task Force in Planning Commission is chalking out a strategy.



1,396 Indian Technical Institutes to be upgraded to achieve technical excellence.



An autonomous Debt Management Office in government to be set up.



Government to create one lakh jobs for physically challenged. Government will reimburse the EPF contributions of employers in the case of physically challenged people taken on rolls of the company and included in the PF scheme. A fund of Rs 150 crore to be started which will go up to Rs 450 crore.



An Expert Committee to be set up to study the impact of climate change in India.



Rs 150 crore to be given to Ministry of Youth and Sports for Commonwealth Games and Rs 350 crore to the Delhi Government for the purpose. Rs 50 crore to be provided for the Commonwealth Youth Games in Pune.



Rs 100 crore for recognising excellence in the field of agricultural research.



VAT revenues increased by 24.3 per cent in the first nine months of 2006-07.



A national level goods and services tax to be introduced from next fiscal.



Fiscal deficit to be 3.7 per cent in the current year and revenue deficit two per cent.



Fiscal management enabled States consolidate debt to the tune of Rs.1,10,268 crore and 20 states availed of debt waiver to the tune of Rs.8575 crores. The share of States from the revenue expected to touch Rs.1,42,450 crore during 2007-08 as against Rs.1,20,377 crore during 2006-07.



Total expenditure estimated at Rs 6,81,521 crore.



Increase in gross tax revenue by 19.9 per cent, 20 per cent and 27.8 per cent in first three years of UPA government. Intend to keep tax rates moderate.



Peak customs duty rate on non-agricultural items reduced from 12.5 to ten per cent.



All coking coal fully exempted from duty.



Duties on seconds and defective reduced from 20 to ten per cent.



Customs duty on polyster to be reduced from ten per cent to 7.5 per cent.



Fiscal deficit for 2007-08 pegged at 3.3 per cent of GDP at Rs.1,50,948 crore. Revenue deficit at Rs.72,478 crore which will be 1.5 per cent.



Total expenditure during 2006-07 estimated at Rs.6,80,521 crore including Rs.40,000 crore for SBI shares.



Duty on pet food reduced from 30 per cent to 20 per cent.



Duty on sunflower oil to be reduced by 15 per cent.



Duty reduced on watch dials and movements and umbrella parts from 12.5 to five per cent.



Import duty of 15 specified machinery to be reduced from 7.5 per cent to five per cent.



Economy grows 8.6 per cent in third quarter of this fiscal compared to 9.3 per cent in the year-ago period



Three per cent import duty to be levied on private importers of aircraft including helicopters.



No change in general CENVAT rate.



Ad valorem duty on petrol and diesel to be brought down from eight to six per cent.



Export duty on iron ore and concentrate at the rate of Rs.300 per tonne. Export duty on Cromium proposed at Rs 2000 tonne.



Small-scale industries excise duty exemption raised from Rs one crore to Rs 1.5 crore.



Manufacturing sector grows at 10.7 per cent, agriculture at 1.5 per cent during October-December 2006-07.



Excise duty for plywood reduced from 16 per cent to eight per cent.



Food mixes to be fully exempted from excise duty.



Excise duty for plywood reduced from 16 per cent to eight per cent.



Bio-diesel to be fully exempted from excise duty.



Water purification devices, small and big, fully exempted from excise. Specific rates of excise duty on cigarettes increased.



Excise duty on Pan Masala without tobacco as mouth freshners reduced from 66 per cent to 45 per cent.



PAN to be made single identity card for all securities/stocks/MFs related transactions.



Insurance companies to launch a senior citizens scheme in 2007-08.



Defence budget increased to Rs 96,000 crore



Tourism infrastructure to get an allocation of Rs.520 crore as against Rs.423 crore last year.



The ceiling of loans for weaker sections under deferential rate of interest scheme will be raised from Rs 6500 to Rs 15,000 and in housing loan from Rs 5000 to Rs 20,000.



Regulations would be put in place for mortgage guarantee company for housing loans.



Regional Rural Banks, which are willing to take up greater responsibilities, to undertake aggressive branch expansion programme. One RRB branch for each of 80 districts so far uncovered. RRBs to accept NRE and FCNR deposits.



FDI inflows between April and January this fiscal touched $12.5 bn while portfolio investment reached $6.8 billion



Technology Upgration Fund in textiles to continue during the 11th Plan. Rs 911 crore to be provided for this.



Allocation for National Highway Development programme to be stepped up from Rs 9,955 crore to Rs 12,600 crore.



Work on Golden Quadrilateral road project nearly complete. Considerable progress made on North-South, East-West corridor and likely to be completed by 2009.



Northeastern region will get Rs 405 crore for highway development. Road-cum-rail project over Brahmaputra in Bogibil, Assam.



Health insurance cover for weavers to be enlarged to ancillary industries. Allocation increased from Rs 241 crore to Rs 321 crore.



A scheme for modernisation and technological upgradation of choir industry for which Rs 23.55 crore has been earmarked.



Manufacturing growth rate estimated at 11.3 per cent.



9.2 per cent GDP growth rate estimated in 2006-07.



Average growth for last three years is 8.6 per cent.



Saving rate of 32.4 per cent, investment rate of 33.8 per cent will continue.



A number of proposals to perk up agriculture to be announced.



Average inflation in FY'07 to be 5.2-5.4 per cent; govt confident of managing inflation



Bank credit rate grew by 29 per cent during first ten months of 2006-07



Inflation during 2006-07 estimated at between 5.2 and 5.4 per cent against 4.4 per cent during the previous year.



Abhijit Sen report on forward trading to be submitted in two months' time.



Additional irrigation potential of 24 lakh hectares to be implemented, including nine lakh hectares under Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme.



Economy in a stronger position than ever before.



15,054 villages have been covered under rural telephony and efforts to be made to complete the target of covering 20,000 villages by 2006-07.



Allocation on Healthcare to increase by 21.9 per cent.



Allocattion for education to be enhanced by 34.2 per cent.



Two lakh more teachers to be employed and five lakh more classrooms to be constructed.



Secondary education allowance to be increased from Rs.1,837 crore to Rs.3,794 crore.



Government committed to fiscal reforms.



Foreign exchange reserves stand at 180 billion dollars.



Allocation under Rajiv Gandhi Drinking Mission stepped up from Rs 4680 crore to Rs 5850 crore.



Government concerned over inflation and would take all steps for moderating it.



Already a number of steps on fiscal, monetary and supply management side have been taken.



Annual target of 15 lakh houses under Bharat Nirmal Programme to be exceeded.



Allocation for National Rural Health Mission stepped up from Rs 8207 crore to Rs 9947 crore.



Gross budgetary support in 2007-08 raised to Rs 2,05,100 crore from 1,72,728 crore in 2006-07. Of this, budgetary support to the Central plan will go up to 1,54,939 crore against 1,72,728 crore.



School dropout rates high. To prevent dropout, a National Means-cum-Merit scholarship to be implemented, with an allocation of Rs 6,000 per child.



Rs 1290 crore to be provided for elimination of polio. Intensive coverage will be undertaken in 20 districts in UP and 10 districts in Bihar. This will be integrated into NRHM.



National AIDS Control Programme to achieve zero level disease.



Measures for significant improvement of health care in rural area.



Allocation for ICDS programme to be increased from Rs 4087 crore to Rs 4761 crore.



30 more districts under NREGA. Additional allocation of Rs.12,000 crore for it.



Rs 800 crore for Sampoorna Gram Rozgar Yojana in districts not covered by NREGA. Swarna Jayanti Swarozgar Yojana allocation increased from Rs 250 crore to Rs 344 crore.



Computerisation of PDS and integrated computerization programme for FCI.



Allocation for schemes only for SCs and STs to be increased to Rs 3271 crore.



Rs 63 crore for share capital for National Minorities Development Finance Corporation following Sachar Committee recommendations.



Allocation for SC/ST scholarships enhanced from Rs.440 crore to Rs.611 crore.



Scholarships programme for minorities students to be of the order of Rs 72 crore for pre-metric, Rs 48 crore for graduate and postgraduate.



Total Budget for the Northeastern region raised from Rs 12,041 crore to Rs 14,365 crore.



New Industrial Policy for the northeastern region to be in place before March 31.



Women's development allocation will be Rs.22,282 crore.



Rs 7,000 crore allocation for better tax administration to be used for social schemes.



Rs 2,25,000 crore farm credit proposed in the new budget. A target of additional 50 lakh farmers to be brought under farm credit.



Farmers' credit likely to reach Rs.1,90,000 crore as against the targeted Rs.1,75,000 crore during 2006-07.



Special Purpose Tea Fund to rejuvenate tea production.



Rs 100 crore allocated for National Rainfed Area Authority.



One hundred per cent subsidy for small farmers and 50 per cent for other farmers for water recharging scheme.



World Bank signed agreement for revival of 5,763 waterbodies in Tamil Nadu. Loan component Rs 2,182 crore. To have a command area of four lakh hectares. Similar agreement with Andhra Pradesh in March for recharge of 2,000 bodies. Command area 2.5 lakh hectares.



Bonds worth Rs 5,000 crore to augment NABARD to be issued.



Death and disability cover for rural landless families to be introduced, known as 'Aam Aadmi Bima Yojana'.



70 lakh households to be covered under a social welfare scheme with LIC and with support from state governments.



50 per cent of the premium at Rs.200 per household to be given by the Centre. Rs.1,000 crore fund to be maintained by LIC for the purpose.



Central public sector enterprises will be given Rs 16,261 crore as equity support and loans of over Rs 2600 crore.



Sources: Times of India; NDTV; StarNews




Sanjeev Himachali

Blog: http://sanjeevhimachali.blogspot.com

E-mail: ss_himachali@yahoo.com; sanjeev.himachali@gmail.com

Host To The Commonwealth Games - A Theatre Of Dreams And Retro Rehab - It Can Only Be Manchester

When you’re planning a weekend away Manchester may not be the first destination that pops into your head. It does not have sun, sea or sand but it does have arguably the best nightlife in the country, a thriving music scene, some of the best shopping outside of London and, of course, the Theatre of Dreams.



Following the 1996 bombing and the 2002 Commonwealth Games, Manchester has undergone some dramatic restoration work, which has made it the cosmopolitan metropolis it is today.



The city centre boasts the only branches of Selfridges and Harvey Nichols outside of London and Birmingham. However, if flash department stores aren’t your thing why not try the Northern Quarter - the ultimate in retro cool with shops called Pop, American Graffiti, Retro Rehab and Oxfam Originals.



Obviously you can’t base a vacation solely on shopping (or so I’m told!) and Manchester has more than enough attractions to satisfy.



The Urbis is Manchester’s museum of city life and in it visitors can see exhibitions on everything from the city’s music scene to the Manchester bombing.



Of course, nothing sums up city life more than the city’s love of sport. A trip to Manchester is not complete for any football fan without a visit to the ‘Theatre of Dreams’ (or Old Trafford to non-red-devils-fans). The home ground of Manchester United FC has been the setting for some of the most memorable games in football history and die-hard fans are invited to take a tour of the impressive stadium with a clued-up guide. Not to be outdone the blues have a striking ground themselves. Inside the City of Manchester stadium, Manchester City fans can relive some of City’s greatest moments.



A day of sight seeing in Manchester can be thirsty work and luckily the city provides plenty of pubs, bars and clubs. From the Northern Quarter, Deansgate Locks or the huge gay district of Canal Street there is something for everyone.



So next time you’re looking for a city break, forget the stereo types and take a trip to Manchester. I’ll take any bet you’ll realise it’s not so grim up North after all!




Russ Pooley writes for Drake & Cavendish who provide a luxury hotel research directory featuring over 5,000 luxury hotels in over 700 resort locations around the world. As a content provider we are committed to developing entertaining and informative travel related information. You can read further articles and details at
http://www.drakeandcavendish.com/luxury_hotels/england/north_west/north_west_luxury_hotels/

India's Chances at Commonwealth Games 2006

The fragrance of Commonwealth Games 2006 is all around and the Indians are assessing the chances of Medals in it. Having won the bid to host the Commonwealth Games in the year 2010, it’s an issue of great speculation and interest to witness how India fares as a host too.



Looking the stats of last Commonwealth Games held in 2002, India stood 4th in rank with Australia, England and Canada at top three positions. The total medals won by India were 69 with 30 Gold medals.



Indian women notched more gold medals (16) then men (14).



In 2010, 71 nations will be participating.



A look at stats of India's performance in previous Commonwealth Games highlights India's winning majorly in Athletics, Boxing, Wrestling and Weightlifting. Minor wins in Shooting, Hockey and Badminton. The total number of sports in 2002 was 17 which is high as against 10 in 1994. However this increase in number of sports does not increase the chances of India winning more medals as the core sports in which India has won medals were included in 1994, 1998 as well as 2002. India has not shown any wins in sports like Gymnastics, Tennis and Swimming. In 2002, Anjali Vedpathak and Jaspal Rana won 14 gold in shooting. Women lifters won 11 gold. Women athletes Anju Bobby George and Nilan J Singh won medals. In 2010, individual wins should rule the roost again and try to bring India at rank 3.




About the author:



Mr. J. Singh is an eminent writer with his respectable presence in the field of Article / Content Writing, since last 15 years. He writes on different subjects and issues like: sports, games, events, internet, life, health, interiors, website etc.



Mostly, he writes for: http://www.commonwealthgames2010.com

The Impact of Commonwealth Games on Tourism

Being able to bring in the 2010 CWG, Common Wealth Games, to Delhi, the National Capital Territory (NCT) as the host country has been a big boost for brand India. Delhi stretches for 1483 km, skimming border areas of States of Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh and the contact ability of CWG (Common Wealth Games) Delhi 2010 on tourism is obviously expected to help build and establish better, stronger and enviable resources and image for the host city, its surrounding areas and the country at large.



How far this impact of the Commonwealth Games on tourism will be felt can only be determined after this great sporting event, scheduled for October 2010, comes into full spirited force; bringing along with the pleasures of the games, a greater scope for allied industries and ministries that look towards sports tourism as a smart card to enhance their own lot. Some of these include marketing, advertising, education and hospitality sectors that are looking forward to introducing a new India for the sportspersons, their respective entourage and other global visitors to the country.



While knowing the time frame beforehand for the CWG is a definite advantage for the ministry of culture, tourism, transport and industrial development, there are many related ministries wanting to also jump the band wagon to use the CWG as a base for developing greater public relations with domestic, regional and international representatives at the CWG for their industry.



Since the Olympic and Commonwealth Games are the second largest sports events held in modern times, going by the fact that other cities that have hosted the CWG have recorded major spurt in tourism, Indian tourism sector is also looking forward to this chance of their country playing host to the CWG and it getting a worthy chance at presenting newer, vibrant youth-appeal for their motherland. Some examples for novel cultural showcasing and successful gift-wrapping done by tourism sectors having played host to CWG before are global interest segments like adventure, spa or spirituality tourism, as evident in the case of earlier hosts of world sporting events: Beijing, China and Barcelona, Spain benefited from hosting the Olympics while Manchester, UK and Melbourne, Australia received greater tourist inflow during and after playing host to CWG 2002 and 2006, respectively.




Manoj Gursahani is the Chairman of India's first ecommerce travel portal- TravelMartIndia. Visit the blog for more travel related issues, travel tips and destinations

2010 Commonwealth Games

India's Sports Minister will head the apex committee for conducting the games while the [[Indian Olympic Association]] president [[Suresh Kalmadi]] will head the organising committee. The dates of games are not fixed, though it is confirmed that the games will be held either in October or November.

The advertising campaign for the games was revealed on the [[26 March]], [[2006]], right after the [[Transfer of the Flag]] from the Mayor of [[Melbourne]] to the Mayor of [[Delhi]].

The [[triathlon]] appears likely to be excluded from these games as there is no suitable location for the swimming stage [http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3629634a1823,00.html]. The organisers have also proposed axing [[basketball]] but want to include [[archery]], [[tennis]], and [[billiards]] and [[snooker]] for men. [[Cricket]], although in strong demand, may not make a come-back as the [[Board of Control for Cricket in India]] were not keen on a [[Twenty20]] tournament, but the organisers did not want a [[One day tournament]] [http://content.cricinfo.com/ci/content/story/234191.html].

[[Indian Rugby Football Union]] officials are helping the Games Committee in the organisation of building a [[rugby union]]-specific stadium. [http://www.skalmadi.org/story/2004/6/20/34739/9832]

In addition to new sports facilities, the entire city is to be given a facelift, including new roads, modernisation and increase in [[public transport]], new [[power plant]]s etc. The estimated amount to be poured into the city to ready in time for the 2010 games is about $17.5 billion.