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Desirability and Feasibility of Changing the Financial Year

Desirability and Feasibility of Changing the Financial Year
आरंभ करने की तिथि :
Aug 24, 2016
अंतिम तिथि :
Oct 01, 2016
00:00 AM IST (GMT +5.30 Hrs)
प्रस्तुतियाँ समाप्त हो चुके

The Government of India has appointed a Committee chaired by Dr. Shankar Acharya, former chief economic adviser, to examine the desirability and feasibility of having a ‘new ...

The Government of India has appointed a Committee chaired by Dr. Shankar Acharya, former chief economic adviser, to examine the desirability and feasibility of having a ‘new financial year’. Other distinguished members of the Committee are Shri K M Chandrasekhar, former Cabinet Secretary, Shri PV Rajaraman, former Principal Finance Secretary, Tamil Nadu and Dr. Rajiv Kumar, Senior Fellow Centre for Policy Research.

Presently, the financial year followed by governments in India runs from 1st April to the following 31st March.

This issue was last examined by the L K Jha Committee in 1985, whose recommendation to move to a financial year of January 1- December 31 (for Central and State Governments) was then not accepted by the then Government.

There are many arguments for and against the change in financial year which revolve around issues of budget and cash management by government, seasonality of government revenues and expenditure, impact of Monsoon on budget forecasting, working season, timelines involved in the legislative cycle of passage of Budget by the Parliament, international comparability of fiscal statistics, aligning government’s financial year with year for tax assessment and corporate accounting purposes. Some arguments are less on the intrinsic merit or demerit of the change but rather on the timing of the change when the change coincides with other developments impacting businesses.

This Discussion Forum seeks to invite inputs from everyone interested in this issue.

We welcome your comments, suggestions, information and documents on the Committee’s Terms of Reference and issues related to it. Please provide these latest by 30th September, 2016.

फिर से कायम कर देना
816 सबमिशन दिखा रहा है
ManiKandan_118
ManiKandan_118 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
1. Our country is huge and has varied climating season across the length and breath of the country, so aliging Financial Year to harvesting time of the entire contry is not possible. But on majority part of the country,it's around MAR-APR time frame, so dont change current set-up (many state-level new year is alos during this time frame based on harvesting time) 2.Align budget year with Financial Year 3.Generally holidays come during MAR-APR timeframe and work burden will be less by then
Jagdish Chander
Jagdish Chander 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
India is a business partner of large number of prominent countries. All these countries have calendar year as financial accounting year. For harmonious financial accounting with its other partners India needs to also adopt calendar year as financial year. Now for a overlapping period of three months from January to March, it is last quarter for India whereas for rest of the world it is first quarter. For Govt as well as the business community this overlapping period is creates big problem
ketan satnalia
ketan satnalia 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
The financial year must be changed to 30th November. This will almost coincide with Deepawali in our country. This way various compliance of laws will be over by 31st may and people can then enjoy festival and school holidays. Now everything comes on 30th September which is peak festival season. It may look odd to have it on 30th November and not 31st December, but I think America is also following October as financial year. we must not succumb to foreign pressures.
Jayesh Kumar
Jayesh Kumar 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
Rather than changing the financial year, govt shall start accrual accounting vs current system of cash accounting. This would bring transparency and accountability in the system. E.g. every year govt spends billions on different projects, do we know exactly how much in total has been spend for a project? How much have we actually invested in each project in total?
anil s
anil s 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
Dear Government, It is really nice move to shift calendar so that Budget fund allotment will be done way before start of monsoon and infrastructure spending esp on roads and other civic amenity can be started at beginning of year or can be completed before monsoon. In present situation, after budget all contract rush during monsoon, and it affect productivity, quality and trouble in civic management. I would suggest financial year or budget to be done at Nov or Dec. Kindly consider. Thank you
Arpit Garg
Arpit Garg 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
This change is not in line with our Indian Culture and Beliefs. Indian Calendar starts with date "Chaitra Shukla - 1 ". This date falls nearby start of April month of Roman Calendar and marking 1st April serves as average date. This keeps us not forget our own calendar and culture. Changing this date to Jan 1 will do away with our culture and beliefs and thus not a good idea.
Raveesh Mehra
Raveesh Mehra 9 साल 9 महीने पहले
We should also have a Fixed Lunch Time across all Public & Private offices all over India as it would help increase India's Productivity & GDP because currently due to different lunch timings, citizens waste lot of effort & time waiting, calling, making personal visits etc. While people can continue to have personal Breakfast & Dinner time as it does not affect India's or Indians productivity.