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Expert Explains: How Budget 2026 shifts from revenue collection to ‘institutional maturity’


What Happened

  • Budget 2026-27, in conjunction with the new Income Tax Act, 2025 (coming into force April 1, 2026), signals a deliberate shift in India's direct tax philosophy — from maximising revenue extraction through enforcement to building institutional frameworks that promote voluntary compliance.
  • Key reforms include: consolidation of assessment and penalty proceedings under a single order; rationalisation of 333 income tax rules from the current 500+ under the Income Tax Rules, 1962; automated, rule-based Safe Harbour approvals for transfer pricing; and targeted decriminalisation of procedural defaults.
  • The Income Tax Act, 2025 replaces the Income Tax Act, 1961 — India's first comprehensive direct tax code rewrite in 64 years — although Budget 2026-27 introduces refinements even before full implementation.
  • The reforms represent a movement toward "trust-based compliance" — reducing adversarial audit and enforcement in favour of risk-based scrutiny and digital processing.

Static Topic Bridges

Direct Tax Reforms: From 1961 Act to Income Tax Act, 2025

India's direct tax system has been governed by the Income Tax Act, 1961 — a complex, heavily amended statute that accumulated 700+ sections and extensive litigation over six decades.

  • Income Tax Act, 2025: Passed in 2025; effective April 1, 2026. Not a wholesale change in tax rates, but a systematic simplification of language, consolidation of provisions, and elimination of obsolete sections.
  • Draft Income Tax Rules, 2026: Released by CBDT (Central Board of Direct Taxes) on February 7, 2026 — reduces rules from 500+ to 333; issued for public comment.
  • Key institutional reforms in Budget 2026-27:
  • Assessment and penalty proceedings consolidated under a common order (reduces double jeopardy and litigation).
  • Procedural simplification using digital medium — reducing discretion in interpretation.
  • Targeted decriminalisation: Penalties reduced for procedural defaults (e.g., late filing of certain forms) where no tax evasion intent is established.
  • Unilateral APAs (Advance Pricing Agreements): 15.5% markup introduced as standard — providing certainty without case-by-case negotiation.
  • Faceless Assessment Scheme (introduced 2020): Assessment conducted digitally by a randomly assigned officer with no physical interface — reduces corruption and jurisdictional influence. Budget 2026-27 deepens this framework.
  • Nodal body: Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) under Ministry of Finance — oversees administration of direct taxes (income tax, corporate tax).

Connection to this news: The article argues that Budget 2026-27 is less about changing tax rates and more about building institutional infrastructure for a self-sustaining compliance ecosystem — a long-term revenue strategy.

Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs) and Transfer Pricing Framework

Transfer pricing refers to the prices charged in transactions between related parties within a multinational group. Since these prices affect taxable income across jurisdictions, they are tightly regulated.

  • Transfer Pricing (TP) regulations in India: Introduced in 2001 under Section 92 of the Income Tax Act; require arm's length pricing for international and specified domestic transactions.
  • Arm's Length Price (ALP): The price that unrelated parties would charge in comparable circumstances — determined using one of 6 approved methods (CUP, RPM, CPM, TNMM, PSM, etc.).
  • Advance Pricing Agreement (APA): A binding agreement between a taxpayer and tax authority on the TP method and pricing for future transactions (3-5 years). India's APA programme launched in 2012.
  • Unilateral APA: Agreement with Indian tax authority only.
  • Bilateral APA: Agreement between India and a foreign jurisdiction's tax authority — prevents double taxation.
  • Safe Harbour Rules (Budget 2026-27 reform): IT/ITeS companies with transactions up to ₹2,000 crore (raised from ₹300 crore) can use a standardised 15.5% operating profit margin — deemed arm's length without detailed documentation. Automated approval; no officer discretion.
  • India is the world's 3rd largest APA country by volume — reflecting the complexity of India's TP environment and the demand for certainty.

Connection to this news: The safe harbour reform and APA framework overhaul are the institutional backbone of the "revenue to reform" shift — by giving companies a clear, automated path to TP compliance, the government reduces litigation while maintaining revenue integrity.

Tax-to-GDP Ratio and India's Revenue Administration Challenge

India's tax-to-GDP ratio — the fraction of GDP collected as taxes — is a measure of both tax compliance and administrative efficiency.

  • India's combined Centre+State tax-to-GDP: ~18-19% (FY26); Central government alone ~11-12% — significantly lower than OECD average of ~33%.
  • Direct tax (income tax + corporate tax) to GDP: ~6.5-7% — lower than indirect tax (GST + customs + excise) share, which is unusual for a large economy (richer countries typically rely more on direct taxes).
  • Tax base expansion: Number of income tax return filers has grown from ~3.8 crore (2013) to ~8.9 crore (2024), reflecting economic formalisation, PAN-Aadhaar linkage, and GSTN cross-referencing.
  • Corporate tax rate (effective since 2019): 22% for domestic companies (down from 30%); 15% for new manufacturing companies — among the globally competitive rates.
  • New Tax Regime vs Old Tax Regime: Budget 2025-26 made the new regime the default; Budget 2026-27 focuses on simplification rather than further rate changes. Under the new regime, income up to ₹12 lakh is effectively tax-free (after standard deduction and rebate).
  • Revenue buoyancy: India's direct tax revenue has been growing at 15-20% annually in recent years, exceeding nominal GDP growth — indicating improved compliance rather than just economic growth.

Connection to this news: The institutional reforms in Budget 2026-27 are designed to sustain this revenue buoyancy through compliance improvement rather than enforcement intensity — the article argues this is a more durable revenue strategy for a maturing tax administration.

Key Facts & Data

  • Income Tax Act, 2025: Replaces Income Tax Act, 1961; effective April 1, 2026
  • Income Tax Rules: Reduced from 500+ to 333 rules in Draft Rules 2026
  • Safe Harbour threshold for IT: Raised from ₹300 crore to ₹2,000 crore (Budget 2026)
  • Safe Harbour margin: 15.5% operating profit (uniform for all IT/ITeS)
  • Transfer Pricing introduced: 2001 (Section 92, Income Tax Act)
  • APA programme launched: 2012; India is 3rd largest APA country globally
  • Unilateral APA markup: 15.5% (Budget 2026-27 standardisation)
  • Faceless Assessment Scheme: Introduced 2020; deepened in Budget 2026-27
  • Central tax-to-GDP: ~11-12% (FY26); below OECD average of 33%
  • Direct tax-to-GDP: ~6.5-7% (well below indirect tax share)
  • Income tax return filers: ~8.9 crore (FY24), up from 3.8 crore (2013)
  • Corporate tax rate: 22% (domestic); 15% (new manufacturing units, since 2019)
  • Direct tax revenue growth: 15-20% annually in recent years