India seen extending IT tax break as business slows
By Sumeet Chatterjee & Bharghavi Nagaraju
MUMBAI (Reuters) - India is expected to extend in next week's budget a tax holiday scheme for outsourcing firms that is due to end in March 2010, giving a breather to a sector that is facing shrinking orders and a sharp earnings slowdown.
Unless extended, earnings of outsourcing firms will take a hit from the fiscal year starting in April 2010 as the tax rates rise to 20-22 percent from 15-18 percent now, said Srivathsan Ramachandran, a technology analyst at Spark Capital Advisors.
Brokerage Religare Hichens, Harrison said in a report the budget for 2009/10, to be presented on Monday, was expected to extend the tax-break benefits by another three years, boosting earnings by 5 to 8 percent for software firms.
India had announced a 10-year tax holiday for the facilities located in technology parks to encourage growth in the showcase sector that employs more than 2 million people and accounts for more than 5 percent of the gross domestic product.
Under the tax holiday scheme, firms in the technology parks pay taxes only on the business they get from India. Most of them get more than three-quarter of their revenue from exports.
"The sector has faced significant challenges in FY09," Kotak Securities said in its budget preview. "The budget is expected to focus on maintaining an environment conducive to the future growth of this largely export-oriented industry."
Ramachandran said an extension would boost sentiment at a time when the software services firms were battling a severe downturn in technology spending and pressure on prices.
An army of low-cost English-speaking engineers has driven an outsourcing boom in India, but turmoil in global markets and a recession in the United States, which accounts for more than half the sector's revenue, have halted the scorching pace of growth. Continued...
Pledge to support economies
G20 financial leaders pledged to prepare strategies to end emergency support for their economies, but to keep the aid flowing until recovery was assured. Full Article | Related Story
Galleon case
U.S. insider trading probe widens
Fourteen people were charged with fraud and conspiracy in a dramatic widening of an insider trading scandal. Full Article





India
US
UK










