The Vijay Kelkar task force on the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act is likely to suggest a frontloading of tax efforts by the new government, a progressive move towards a comprehensive central value added tax on both goods and services at 16 per cent, and major tax administration efforts to effect a 15 per cent rise in revenue over the next four years.
According to finance ministry sources, the task force expects the Centre's revenue deficit to be 0.5 per cent of the gross domestic product by 2007-08, from 3.6 per cent now. This, they said, would render the fiscal deficit at a much more manageable level of about 1.5 per cent of the GDP from 4.6 per cent now.
The report, to be presented to the finance minister by mid-June is significant, since its recommendations are expected to form key inputs for P Chidambaram's first Budget under the United Progressive Alliance government.
The Congress party has often endorsed the Kelkar task force reports on direct and indirect taxes and considers it as a roadmap for reforms in taxation.
Frontloading of tax efforts would essentially require the government to take bold decisions on exemptions and tax administration in the first two years, the sources said.
The committee has projected a compounded annual growth rate of over 16 per cent for direct taxes and almost 28 per cent for excise and service tax collections put together over the next four years.
The highlight of the report, the sources said, would be the extremely bullish assumptions on the growth of service taxes. The task force expects the service tax collections to top Rs 80,000 crore (Rs 800 billion), representing almost a 10-fold