With the Union Budget for FY23 slated to take place on February 1, the retail industry has started making suggestions and recommendations to the Centre for including them in the Budget document.

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Sharing expectations and suggestions for Budget 2022 on the retail sector, Preet Dhupar, Chief Financial Officer, IKEA India said: "We have a positive outlook towards the growth of the retail industry, which has truly become omnichannel in today's world. Retail has played an important role in our lives during the pandemic. We also see life at home take an increasing significance as hybrid work models will continue to emerge in the future. Our recommendations and expectations cover the retail and home furnishing sector."

She further added: "We expect the budget to focus on providing stimulus for growth of the economy. To do this, we believe it is important to take steps to trigger private consumption, support manufacturing and exports, promote and set aside funds towards infrastructure-related capital expenditure, and continue to focus on the spending in public health and healthcare."

The economic impact of the pandemic on the income of people in India must not be underestimated. To stimulate demand, it is important that money is increased in the hands of people and products remain affordable. GST rates on products that are basic to life at home should be lowered, customs duties on good quality furniture and home products should be reduced, she added.

Also Read: Budget 2022: Parliament session starts from January 31, General budget on February 1: Sources

The government has already identified furniture as a focus sector for manufacturing. To make Indian furniture competitive, customs duties on raw materials and intermediaries (not available in India) should be brought down. PLI schemes, financing at lower rates, tax benefits in the initial years will support companies that want to manufacture in India. To increase India’s competitiveness in the global market, we must also look at adopting global quality standards that are tried and tested, Dhupar said.    

The retail sector has the potential to attract FDI. As a capital-intensive sector, what would also help is increasing the time to set off and carry forward losses and interest beyond 8 years; a relook at the think capitalization rules. Tax consolidation between group companies will go a long way to simplify operations for companies, ensure tax optimization and reduce litigations, she added.

Dhupar said that litigations can also be reduced by ensuring that a timely and effective dispute resolution mechanism that is binding on both parties is available for all tax dispute matters. For an industry that spends money on the construction of its stores, there is also a loss of GST credit on spending. This anomaly should be removed. Food FDI policy could be liberalized along the same lines are retail.

"We also urge the government to look at ECB guidelines to allow ECB in the construction development sector, where FDI is allowed but ECB is not. We look forward to the roll-out of the National Retail policy, bring offline and online retail into a single policy framework, reduce the compliance and regulatory burden, give industry status to retail along with financial incentives to large scale projects," she added.