Budget 2024: Aviation industry seeks policies to ease business, wants tax sops | Mint

As finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman prepares to unveil the Union Budget 2024-25 later this month, the civil aviation industry expects policy interventions aimed at ease of business and reducing the tax burden on the sector.

In a memorandum, private airport operators have sent the government several suggestion pertaining to rationalisation of both direct and indirect tax structure. A copy of the memorandum has been reviewed by Mint.

In the memorandum, the Association of Private Airport Operators, whose members include GMR-run Delhi International Airport Ltd, and Adani-operated Mumbai International Airport Ltd, has requested the finance ministry to issue specific clarifications regarding tax charged by airlines on user development fee, which is paid by passengers.

“Since airlines are acting just as a collection agent, they should not deduct tax at source on such an amount while making payment to airport operator. It leads to blockage of working capital of the airport operator,” the private airports body said.

Further, the grouping has also requested the government to increase duty-free allowance to 100,000 for purchase from a duty-free shop in India, from the current 50,000, a limit that was fixed in April 2016. In line with inflation and to increase foreign earnings, the association has also requested the government to allow duty-free shop operators to sell domestic Indian liquor at departures tax-free and be treated as export.

For airlines, the cost burden due to the price of aviation turbine fuel (ATF) remains a crucial challenge. Indian airlines have long demanded that the government further rationalise the duty structure for ATF and to include it under the goods and services tax regime.

ATF, or jet fuel, amounts to nearly 40% of an airline’s total expenses, compared to a global average of 20-25%. While the price of jet fuel saw a sequential reduction of 6.5% in June to 94,969.01 per kilolitre in New Delhi, it still remains much higher compared to pre-pandemic levels of around 64,000 per kl in 2019-20.

The private aircraft operators are keen to seek clarity on the 2.5% import duty for aircraft imported for non-scheduled operations. The industry is hopeful that the government will do away with this tax, which was imposed around 15 years ago.

Companies involved in aircraft and engine component manufacturing are optimistic about incentives to boost the domestic supply chain, as Indian airlines including Air India, IndiGo, Akasa now have a cumulative orderbook of more than 1 600 planes.

“A production-linked incentive scheme for the manufacture of aircraft components and sub-assemblies with an emphasis on high in-country value-addition will be welcome. Measures such as tax breaks for aerospace R&D and systems development will also help,” Aravind Melligeri, chairman and chief executive officer of Karnataka-based aircraft components maker Aequs, said.

The emerging drone industry is also seeking more policy and fiscal measures to establish India as a drone hub by 2030.

“Concrete support for the drone ecosystem, including an expansion in the PLI scheme, a dedicated R&D fund, common testing facilities for larger systems, a certification scheme for BVLOS (Beyond Visual Line of Sight) drones, and the scaling up of government-led market opportunities, are vital for the growth of this nascent industry in the country,” Ankit Mehta, chief executive officer, ideaForge, said.

Drone pilot training company Drone Destination is hopeful of a largescale increase in usage of drones, including across insurance, mining, asset and infrastructure inspection, and monitoring.

“There should be a uniform GST rate of 5% on drones, drone components, and parts. Subsidies should be offered at both the central and state levels to drone service providers, particularly for agricultural applications such as drone spraying. This will support the push for Kisan drone adoption and increase the use of drones in agriculture,” chief executive officer of Drone Destination Chirag Sharma said.

Currently, agricultural spray drones are taxed at 5%, while agricultural survey drones and all other drones attract a GST of 18%

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