Govt monopoly must end, tax rates must be globally competitive: Arun Jaitley

Govt monopoly must end, tax rates must be globally competitive: Arun Jaitley
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Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Saturday said, policymakers need to change their regulatory mindset asserting that role of state should be minimised and government monopoly must end wherever possible.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Saturday said, policymakers need to change their regulatory mindset asserting that role of state should be minimised and government monopoly must end wherever possible.


Speaking at the National Workshop on Citizen-Centric Governance, he said the economic reforms, which seek to promote easing of doing business, will continue as these are "never-ending processes and do not have a finishing line".

Jaitley said policymakers in India still have a "regulatory mindset" which needs to change even as he spoke of the urgency for policing reforms to make police-citizen interaction more civilised.

"The control temperament or the control freak temperament of the political system has still not been fully done away with and there is a legacy to it," Jaitley said, adding that all actions of the government should be aimed at "providing a better quality of life to citizens and minimising the role of the government".

"Wherever possible, the role of the state should be minimised the government's monopoly must end. Wherever we have ended them, we are better-off. We have ended them in the airlines sector, we have not ended them in the railway sector.

And the result is very clear. "There are many ways of doing this. As far as processes are concerned, every department has to take simplification exercise and particularly those departments which have the interface with the public," he said.

Jaitley mentioned that the use of technology has helped in improving the system of filing income tax returns and expeditiously providing refunds.

"Ease of doing business means providing a better regime than neighbours and tax rates which are globally competitive," he said, adding that the government intended to reduce corporate tax to 25 per cent from 30 per cent in the next four years and do away with "most of the tax exemptions".
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