Govt eyes additional Rs 7,000 cr dividend payout in 2011-12

Tags: dividend, Govt, News
Hard-pressed for funds, the government is looking to garner an additional Rs 7,000 crore

RELATED ARTICLES

by persuading state-owned companies to increase their dividend payout for FY'12, taking the total collection in the current fiscal to over Rs 30,000 crore.

In addition, the government expects to rake in Rs 1,500 crore through Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) in the current fiscal.

"(We are) looking at garnering Rs 7,000 crore higher dividend payment by PSU companies and Rs 1,500 crore as dividend tax distribution tax (DDT)", a senior Finance Ministry official said here.

Senior officials of the Finance Ministry led by Secretary of Economic Affairs (DEA) R Gopalan have held a series of consultations with the heads of state-owned enterprises, including PSU banks, to persuade them to raise the dividend payout to the government.

During 2010-11, the government collected Rs 25,978 crore as dividend from public sector enterprises. The target for the current fiscal was pegged at Rs 23,495 crore.

The government has been facing financial problems on account of its rising subsidy bill and poor receipt from disinvestment and the fiscal deficit for 2011-12 is expected to exceed the budget target of 4.6 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Disinvestment in PSUs has yielded only about Rs 1,145 crore this year through the sale of equity in Power Finance Corporation (PFC), as against the target of Rs 40,000 crore for 2011-12.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has informed Parliament that the subsidy bill for FY'12 is likely to exceed the Budget estimate by Rs 1 lakh crore.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • Foreign brokerages must be Street-smart to win battle of bourses

    Earlier this week, Financial Chronicle reported that foreign brokerages were failing to crack the retail broking market in India, once seen as very pr

INTERVIEWS

GV Nageswara Rao

MD & CEO, IDBI Federal Life

Timothy Moe

Goldman Sachs

Chander Mohan Sethi

CMD, Reckitt Benckiser India

COLUMNIST

Urs Schöttli

India needs to project soft power

The rise from a regional to a global p­ower is ...

Robert Clements

Walk the talk when giving others advice

The only thing one does with advice is to pass ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

Keeping our value system uninjured

Every time one reads a newspaper, there is fr­esh news ...