Page 1
22 September 2023
T
The digiTal peRSoNal daTa
pRoTecTioN acT, 2023
he Act provides for the processing of
digital personal data in a manner that
recognises both the rights of individuals
to protect their personal data and the
need to process such personal data for lawful
purposes, and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto.
1. The Act protects digital personal data (that is,
the data by which a person may be identified)
by providing for the following:
a. The obligations of Data Fiduciaries (that
is, persons, companies, and government
entities who process data) for data
processing (that is, collection, storage, or
any other operation on personal data);
b. The rights and duties of Data Principals
(that is, the person to whom the data
relates); and
c. Financial penalties for
breaches of rights, duties,
and obligations.
The Act also seeks to achieve
the following:
a. Introduce data protection
law with minimum
disruption while ensuring
necessary change in the
way Data Fiduciaries
process data;
b. enhance the ease of Living
and the ease of Doing
Business; and
c. enable India’s digital
economy and its innovation
ecosystem.
2. The Act is based on the
following seven principles:
a. The principle of consented,
lawful, and transparent use of personal
data;
b. The principle of purpose limitation (use of
personal data only for the purpose specified
at the time of obtaining consent from the
Data Principal);
c. The principle of data minimisation
(collection of only as much personal data as
is necessary to serve the specified purpose);
d. The principle of data accuracy (ensuring
data is correct and updated);
e. The principle of storage limitation (storing
data only until it is needed for the specified
purpose);
f. The principle of reasonable security
safeguards; and
22 SePteMBer 2023
do y ou Know ?
Page 2
22 September 2023
T
The digiTal peRSoNal daTa
pRoTecTioN acT, 2023
he Act provides for the processing of
digital personal data in a manner that
recognises both the rights of individuals
to protect their personal data and the
need to process such personal data for lawful
purposes, and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto.
1. The Act protects digital personal data (that is,
the data by which a person may be identified)
by providing for the following:
a. The obligations of Data Fiduciaries (that
is, persons, companies, and government
entities who process data) for data
processing (that is, collection, storage, or
any other operation on personal data);
b. The rights and duties of Data Principals
(that is, the person to whom the data
relates); and
c. Financial penalties for
breaches of rights, duties,
and obligations.
The Act also seeks to achieve
the following:
a. Introduce data protection
law with minimum
disruption while ensuring
necessary change in the
way Data Fiduciaries
process data;
b. enhance the ease of Living
and the ease of Doing
Business; and
c. enable India’s digital
economy and its innovation
ecosystem.
2. The Act is based on the
following seven principles:
a. The principle of consented,
lawful, and transparent use of personal
data;
b. The principle of purpose limitation (use of
personal data only for the purpose specified
at the time of obtaining consent from the
Data Principal);
c. The principle of data minimisation
(collection of only as much personal data as
is necessary to serve the specified purpose);
d. The principle of data accuracy (ensuring
data is correct and updated);
e. The principle of storage limitation (storing
data only until it is needed for the specified
purpose);
f. The principle of reasonable security
safeguards; and
22 SePteMBer 2023
do y ou Know ?
23 September 2023
g. The principle of accountability
(through adjudication of data
breaches and breaches of
the provisions of the Act and
imposition of penalties for the
breaches).
3. The Act has few other innovative
features:
The Act is concise and SArAL,
that is, Simple, Accessible, r ational &
Actionable Law as it—
a. Uses plain language;
b. Contains illustrations that
make the meaning clear;
c. Contains no provisos
(“Provided that… ”); and
d. Has minimal cross-
referencing.
4. By using the word ‘she’ instead
of ‘he’, for the first time it
acknowledges women in
Parliamentary law-making.
5. The Act provides for following
rights to the individuals:
a. The right to access information about
personal data processed;
b. The right to correction and erasure of data;
c. The right to grievance redressal; and
d. The right to nominate a person to exercise
rights in case of death or incapacity.
For enforcing his/her rights, an affected Data
Principal may approach the Data Fiduciary in the
first instance. In case he/she is not satisfied, he/she
can complain against the Data Fiduciary to the Data
Protection Board in a hassle-free manner.
6. The Act provides for following obligations on
the data fiduciary:
a. To have security safeguards to prevent
personal data breach;
b. To intimate personal data breaches to
the affected Data Principal and the Data
Protection Board;
c. To erase personal data when it is no longer
needed for the specified purpose;
d. To erase personal data upon withdrawal of
consent;
e. To have in place grievance redressal system
and an officer to respond to queries from
Data Principals; and
f. To fulfill certain additional obligations
in respect of Data Fiduciaries notified
as Significant Data Fiduciaries, such as
appointing a data auditor and conducting
periodic Data Protection Impact
Assessment to ensure higher degree of
data protection.
7. The Act safeguards the personal data of children
also.
a. The Act allows a Data Fiduciary to process
the personal data of children only with
parental consent.
b. The Act does not permit processing which
is detrimental to well-being of children
or involves their tracking, behavioural
monitoring or targeted advertising. ?
Source: PIB
23 SePteMBer 2023
Page 3
22 September 2023
T
The digiTal peRSoNal daTa
pRoTecTioN acT, 2023
he Act provides for the processing of
digital personal data in a manner that
recognises both the rights of individuals
to protect their personal data and the
need to process such personal data for lawful
purposes, and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto.
1. The Act protects digital personal data (that is,
the data by which a person may be identified)
by providing for the following:
a. The obligations of Data Fiduciaries (that
is, persons, companies, and government
entities who process data) for data
processing (that is, collection, storage, or
any other operation on personal data);
b. The rights and duties of Data Principals
(that is, the person to whom the data
relates); and
c. Financial penalties for
breaches of rights, duties,
and obligations.
The Act also seeks to achieve
the following:
a. Introduce data protection
law with minimum
disruption while ensuring
necessary change in the
way Data Fiduciaries
process data;
b. enhance the ease of Living
and the ease of Doing
Business; and
c. enable India’s digital
economy and its innovation
ecosystem.
2. The Act is based on the
following seven principles:
a. The principle of consented,
lawful, and transparent use of personal
data;
b. The principle of purpose limitation (use of
personal data only for the purpose specified
at the time of obtaining consent from the
Data Principal);
c. The principle of data minimisation
(collection of only as much personal data as
is necessary to serve the specified purpose);
d. The principle of data accuracy (ensuring
data is correct and updated);
e. The principle of storage limitation (storing
data only until it is needed for the specified
purpose);
f. The principle of reasonable security
safeguards; and
22 SePteMBer 2023
do y ou Know ?
23 September 2023
g. The principle of accountability
(through adjudication of data
breaches and breaches of
the provisions of the Act and
imposition of penalties for the
breaches).
3. The Act has few other innovative
features:
The Act is concise and SArAL,
that is, Simple, Accessible, r ational &
Actionable Law as it—
a. Uses plain language;
b. Contains illustrations that
make the meaning clear;
c. Contains no provisos
(“Provided that… ”); and
d. Has minimal cross-
referencing.
4. By using the word ‘she’ instead
of ‘he’, for the first time it
acknowledges women in
Parliamentary law-making.
5. The Act provides for following
rights to the individuals:
a. The right to access information about
personal data processed;
b. The right to correction and erasure of data;
c. The right to grievance redressal; and
d. The right to nominate a person to exercise
rights in case of death or incapacity.
For enforcing his/her rights, an affected Data
Principal may approach the Data Fiduciary in the
first instance. In case he/she is not satisfied, he/she
can complain against the Data Fiduciary to the Data
Protection Board in a hassle-free manner.
6. The Act provides for following obligations on
the data fiduciary:
a. To have security safeguards to prevent
personal data breach;
b. To intimate personal data breaches to
the affected Data Principal and the Data
Protection Board;
c. To erase personal data when it is no longer
needed for the specified purpose;
d. To erase personal data upon withdrawal of
consent;
e. To have in place grievance redressal system
and an officer to respond to queries from
Data Principals; and
f. To fulfill certain additional obligations
in respect of Data Fiduciaries notified
as Significant Data Fiduciaries, such as
appointing a data auditor and conducting
periodic Data Protection Impact
Assessment to ensure higher degree of
data protection.
7. The Act safeguards the personal data of children
also.
a. The Act allows a Data Fiduciary to process
the personal data of children only with
parental consent.
b. The Act does not permit processing which
is detrimental to well-being of children
or involves their tracking, behavioural
monitoring or targeted advertising. ?
Source: PIB
23 SePteMBer 2023 24 September 2023
T
law coMMiSSioN oF iNdia
he Law Commission of India is a non-
statutory body and is constituted by
a notification of the Government of
India, Ministry of Law & Justice, and
Department of Legal Affairs with definite terms of
reference to carry out research in the field of law, and
the Commission makes recommendations to the
Government (in the form of r eports) as per its terms
of reference. The Law Commission takes up various
subjects on references made by the Department
of Legal Affairs, Supreme Court, and High Courts
and submit reports. The Law Commission of India
provides excellent, thought-provoking, and vital
reviews of the laws in India.
The Government has constituted the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India for a period of three years,
with effect from 21 February 2020. The term of the
22
nd
Law Commission has since been extended up
to 31
August, 2024. The composition of the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India is as follows:
i. a full-time Chairperson;
ii. four full-time Members
(including Member-Secretary);
iii. Secretary, Department of
Legal Affairs, as ex officio
Member;
iv. Secretary, Legislative
Department as ex officio
Member; and
v. not more than five part-time
Members.
how does the l aw Commission
Function?
• y The Commission works on
projects based on references
received from the Central
Government and/or from
the Supreme Court and High
Courts. At times, keeping
in view the importance
of the subject matter, the
Commission initiates studies
on specific subjects, suo moto.
Methodology
•y On receipt of references for examination,
priorities are decided and preparatory work is
assigned to the Member/Member-Secretary of
the Commission. Depending on the nature and
scope of the topic, research, methodologies for
the collection of data and views are formulated
keeping the scope of the proposal for reform in
mind.
•y Discussion at Commission meetings during
this period helps not only in articulating the
issues and focusing on the research but also
in evolving a consensus among members
of the Commission. What emerges out of
this preparatory work in the Commission is
a working paper outlining the problem and
suggesting matters deserving consideration.
At times, the paper is sent out for circulation
among the public and concerned interest
groups/stakeholders with a view to eliciting
objections and suggestions. Usually, a carefully
24 SePteMBer 2023
Page 4
22 September 2023
T
The digiTal peRSoNal daTa
pRoTecTioN acT, 2023
he Act provides for the processing of
digital personal data in a manner that
recognises both the rights of individuals
to protect their personal data and the
need to process such personal data for lawful
purposes, and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto.
1. The Act protects digital personal data (that is,
the data by which a person may be identified)
by providing for the following:
a. The obligations of Data Fiduciaries (that
is, persons, companies, and government
entities who process data) for data
processing (that is, collection, storage, or
any other operation on personal data);
b. The rights and duties of Data Principals
(that is, the person to whom the data
relates); and
c. Financial penalties for
breaches of rights, duties,
and obligations.
The Act also seeks to achieve
the following:
a. Introduce data protection
law with minimum
disruption while ensuring
necessary change in the
way Data Fiduciaries
process data;
b. enhance the ease of Living
and the ease of Doing
Business; and
c. enable India’s digital
economy and its innovation
ecosystem.
2. The Act is based on the
following seven principles:
a. The principle of consented,
lawful, and transparent use of personal
data;
b. The principle of purpose limitation (use of
personal data only for the purpose specified
at the time of obtaining consent from the
Data Principal);
c. The principle of data minimisation
(collection of only as much personal data as
is necessary to serve the specified purpose);
d. The principle of data accuracy (ensuring
data is correct and updated);
e. The principle of storage limitation (storing
data only until it is needed for the specified
purpose);
f. The principle of reasonable security
safeguards; and
22 SePteMBer 2023
do y ou Know ?
23 September 2023
g. The principle of accountability
(through adjudication of data
breaches and breaches of
the provisions of the Act and
imposition of penalties for the
breaches).
3. The Act has few other innovative
features:
The Act is concise and SArAL,
that is, Simple, Accessible, r ational &
Actionable Law as it—
a. Uses plain language;
b. Contains illustrations that
make the meaning clear;
c. Contains no provisos
(“Provided that… ”); and
d. Has minimal cross-
referencing.
4. By using the word ‘she’ instead
of ‘he’, for the first time it
acknowledges women in
Parliamentary law-making.
5. The Act provides for following
rights to the individuals:
a. The right to access information about
personal data processed;
b. The right to correction and erasure of data;
c. The right to grievance redressal; and
d. The right to nominate a person to exercise
rights in case of death or incapacity.
For enforcing his/her rights, an affected Data
Principal may approach the Data Fiduciary in the
first instance. In case he/she is not satisfied, he/she
can complain against the Data Fiduciary to the Data
Protection Board in a hassle-free manner.
6. The Act provides for following obligations on
the data fiduciary:
a. To have security safeguards to prevent
personal data breach;
b. To intimate personal data breaches to
the affected Data Principal and the Data
Protection Board;
c. To erase personal data when it is no longer
needed for the specified purpose;
d. To erase personal data upon withdrawal of
consent;
e. To have in place grievance redressal system
and an officer to respond to queries from
Data Principals; and
f. To fulfill certain additional obligations
in respect of Data Fiduciaries notified
as Significant Data Fiduciaries, such as
appointing a data auditor and conducting
periodic Data Protection Impact
Assessment to ensure higher degree of
data protection.
7. The Act safeguards the personal data of children
also.
a. The Act allows a Data Fiduciary to process
the personal data of children only with
parental consent.
b. The Act does not permit processing which
is detrimental to well-being of children
or involves their tracking, behavioural
monitoring or targeted advertising. ?
Source: PIB
23 SePteMBer 2023 24 September 2023
T
law coMMiSSioN oF iNdia
he Law Commission of India is a non-
statutory body and is constituted by
a notification of the Government of
India, Ministry of Law & Justice, and
Department of Legal Affairs with definite terms of
reference to carry out research in the field of law, and
the Commission makes recommendations to the
Government (in the form of r eports) as per its terms
of reference. The Law Commission takes up various
subjects on references made by the Department
of Legal Affairs, Supreme Court, and High Courts
and submit reports. The Law Commission of India
provides excellent, thought-provoking, and vital
reviews of the laws in India.
The Government has constituted the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India for a period of three years,
with effect from 21 February 2020. The term of the
22
nd
Law Commission has since been extended up
to 31
August, 2024. The composition of the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India is as follows:
i. a full-time Chairperson;
ii. four full-time Members
(including Member-Secretary);
iii. Secretary, Department of
Legal Affairs, as ex officio
Member;
iv. Secretary, Legislative
Department as ex officio
Member; and
v. not more than five part-time
Members.
how does the l aw Commission
Function?
• y The Commission works on
projects based on references
received from the Central
Government and/or from
the Supreme Court and High
Courts. At times, keeping
in view the importance
of the subject matter, the
Commission initiates studies
on specific subjects, suo moto.
Methodology
•y On receipt of references for examination,
priorities are decided and preparatory work is
assigned to the Member/Member-Secretary of
the Commission. Depending on the nature and
scope of the topic, research, methodologies for
the collection of data and views are formulated
keeping the scope of the proposal for reform in
mind.
•y Discussion at Commission meetings during
this period helps not only in articulating the
issues and focusing on the research but also
in evolving a consensus among members
of the Commission. What emerges out of
this preparatory work in the Commission is
a working paper outlining the problem and
suggesting matters deserving consideration.
At times, the paper is sent out for circulation
among the public and concerned interest
groups/stakeholders with a view to eliciting
objections and suggestions. Usually, a carefully
24 SePteMBer 2023 25 September 2023
prepared questionnaire is sent to
interest groups/stakeholders.
•y The Law Commission makes every
effort to ensure that the widest
section of people/stakeholders
are consulted in formulating
proposals for law reforms. In this
process, the Commission brings
along professional bodies and
academic institutions. Seminars
and workshops are organised to
elicit critical opinions on proposed
strategies for reform. The Law
Commission, while taking initiatives
in facilitating Law r eform and the
rule of Law towards the continuous
development of the country, has
made wider consultations with the
stakeholders.
Final report
• y Once the data and views/suggestions are
assimilated, the Commission evaluates
them, and the information is utilised for
appropriate incorporation in the report,
which is written under the guidance of the
Chairman, Members, and Member-Secretary
of the Commission. It is then subjected to
close scrutiny by the full Commission in the
meeting. Once the report and summary
are finalised, the Commission may decide
to prepare a draft amendment or a new
bill, which may be appended to its report.
Thereafter, the final report is submitted to the
Central Government for consideration.
•y It is obvious that the success of the
Commission’s work in law reform is dependent
upon its capacity to consult the widest section
of people and stakeholders and collect data,
views, suggestions, and possible inputs from
the public and concerned interest groups. The
commission is constantly on the lookout for
strategies to accomplish this goal within the
limited resources available to it.
•y The Commission always welcomes suggestions
from any person, institution, or organisation
on the issues under consideration of the
Commission.
Follow-up
The reports of the Law Commission are
laid before Parliament from time to time by the
Department of Legal Affairs, Ministry of Law
and Justice, and forwarded to the concerned
administrative Departments/Ministries for
implementation. They are acted upon by
concerned Departments/ Ministries depending
on the Government’s decision. Invariably, the
reports are cited in Courts, by Parliamentary
Standing Committees, and in academic and public
discourses. ?
Source: PIB and Law Commission of India
25 SePteMBer 2023
Page 5
22 September 2023
T
The digiTal peRSoNal daTa
pRoTecTioN acT, 2023
he Act provides for the processing of
digital personal data in a manner that
recognises both the rights of individuals
to protect their personal data and the
need to process such personal data for lawful
purposes, and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto.
1. The Act protects digital personal data (that is,
the data by which a person may be identified)
by providing for the following:
a. The obligations of Data Fiduciaries (that
is, persons, companies, and government
entities who process data) for data
processing (that is, collection, storage, or
any other operation on personal data);
b. The rights and duties of Data Principals
(that is, the person to whom the data
relates); and
c. Financial penalties for
breaches of rights, duties,
and obligations.
The Act also seeks to achieve
the following:
a. Introduce data protection
law with minimum
disruption while ensuring
necessary change in the
way Data Fiduciaries
process data;
b. enhance the ease of Living
and the ease of Doing
Business; and
c. enable India’s digital
economy and its innovation
ecosystem.
2. The Act is based on the
following seven principles:
a. The principle of consented,
lawful, and transparent use of personal
data;
b. The principle of purpose limitation (use of
personal data only for the purpose specified
at the time of obtaining consent from the
Data Principal);
c. The principle of data minimisation
(collection of only as much personal data as
is necessary to serve the specified purpose);
d. The principle of data accuracy (ensuring
data is correct and updated);
e. The principle of storage limitation (storing
data only until it is needed for the specified
purpose);
f. The principle of reasonable security
safeguards; and
22 SePteMBer 2023
do y ou Know ?
23 September 2023
g. The principle of accountability
(through adjudication of data
breaches and breaches of
the provisions of the Act and
imposition of penalties for the
breaches).
3. The Act has few other innovative
features:
The Act is concise and SArAL,
that is, Simple, Accessible, r ational &
Actionable Law as it—
a. Uses plain language;
b. Contains illustrations that
make the meaning clear;
c. Contains no provisos
(“Provided that… ”); and
d. Has minimal cross-
referencing.
4. By using the word ‘she’ instead
of ‘he’, for the first time it
acknowledges women in
Parliamentary law-making.
5. The Act provides for following
rights to the individuals:
a. The right to access information about
personal data processed;
b. The right to correction and erasure of data;
c. The right to grievance redressal; and
d. The right to nominate a person to exercise
rights in case of death or incapacity.
For enforcing his/her rights, an affected Data
Principal may approach the Data Fiduciary in the
first instance. In case he/she is not satisfied, he/she
can complain against the Data Fiduciary to the Data
Protection Board in a hassle-free manner.
6. The Act provides for following obligations on
the data fiduciary:
a. To have security safeguards to prevent
personal data breach;
b. To intimate personal data breaches to
the affected Data Principal and the Data
Protection Board;
c. To erase personal data when it is no longer
needed for the specified purpose;
d. To erase personal data upon withdrawal of
consent;
e. To have in place grievance redressal system
and an officer to respond to queries from
Data Principals; and
f. To fulfill certain additional obligations
in respect of Data Fiduciaries notified
as Significant Data Fiduciaries, such as
appointing a data auditor and conducting
periodic Data Protection Impact
Assessment to ensure higher degree of
data protection.
7. The Act safeguards the personal data of children
also.
a. The Act allows a Data Fiduciary to process
the personal data of children only with
parental consent.
b. The Act does not permit processing which
is detrimental to well-being of children
or involves their tracking, behavioural
monitoring or targeted advertising. ?
Source: PIB
23 SePteMBer 2023 24 September 2023
T
law coMMiSSioN oF iNdia
he Law Commission of India is a non-
statutory body and is constituted by
a notification of the Government of
India, Ministry of Law & Justice, and
Department of Legal Affairs with definite terms of
reference to carry out research in the field of law, and
the Commission makes recommendations to the
Government (in the form of r eports) as per its terms
of reference. The Law Commission takes up various
subjects on references made by the Department
of Legal Affairs, Supreme Court, and High Courts
and submit reports. The Law Commission of India
provides excellent, thought-provoking, and vital
reviews of the laws in India.
The Government has constituted the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India for a period of three years,
with effect from 21 February 2020. The term of the
22
nd
Law Commission has since been extended up
to 31
August, 2024. The composition of the 22
nd
Law
Commission of India is as follows:
i. a full-time Chairperson;
ii. four full-time Members
(including Member-Secretary);
iii. Secretary, Department of
Legal Affairs, as ex officio
Member;
iv. Secretary, Legislative
Department as ex officio
Member; and
v. not more than five part-time
Members.
how does the l aw Commission
Function?
• y The Commission works on
projects based on references
received from the Central
Government and/or from
the Supreme Court and High
Courts. At times, keeping
in view the importance
of the subject matter, the
Commission initiates studies
on specific subjects, suo moto.
Methodology
•y On receipt of references for examination,
priorities are decided and preparatory work is
assigned to the Member/Member-Secretary of
the Commission. Depending on the nature and
scope of the topic, research, methodologies for
the collection of data and views are formulated
keeping the scope of the proposal for reform in
mind.
•y Discussion at Commission meetings during
this period helps not only in articulating the
issues and focusing on the research but also
in evolving a consensus among members
of the Commission. What emerges out of
this preparatory work in the Commission is
a working paper outlining the problem and
suggesting matters deserving consideration.
At times, the paper is sent out for circulation
among the public and concerned interest
groups/stakeholders with a view to eliciting
objections and suggestions. Usually, a carefully
24 SePteMBer 2023 25 September 2023
prepared questionnaire is sent to
interest groups/stakeholders.
•y The Law Commission makes every
effort to ensure that the widest
section of people/stakeholders
are consulted in formulating
proposals for law reforms. In this
process, the Commission brings
along professional bodies and
academic institutions. Seminars
and workshops are organised to
elicit critical opinions on proposed
strategies for reform. The Law
Commission, while taking initiatives
in facilitating Law r eform and the
rule of Law towards the continuous
development of the country, has
made wider consultations with the
stakeholders.
Final report
• y Once the data and views/suggestions are
assimilated, the Commission evaluates
them, and the information is utilised for
appropriate incorporation in the report,
which is written under the guidance of the
Chairman, Members, and Member-Secretary
of the Commission. It is then subjected to
close scrutiny by the full Commission in the
meeting. Once the report and summary
are finalised, the Commission may decide
to prepare a draft amendment or a new
bill, which may be appended to its report.
Thereafter, the final report is submitted to the
Central Government for consideration.
•y It is obvious that the success of the
Commission’s work in law reform is dependent
upon its capacity to consult the widest section
of people and stakeholders and collect data,
views, suggestions, and possible inputs from
the public and concerned interest groups. The
commission is constantly on the lookout for
strategies to accomplish this goal within the
limited resources available to it.
•y The Commission always welcomes suggestions
from any person, institution, or organisation
on the issues under consideration of the
Commission.
Follow-up
The reports of the Law Commission are
laid before Parliament from time to time by the
Department of Legal Affairs, Ministry of Law
and Justice, and forwarded to the concerned
administrative Departments/Ministries for
implementation. They are acted upon by
concerned Departments/ Ministries depending
on the Government’s decision. Invariably, the
reports are cited in Courts, by Parliamentary
Standing Committees, and in academic and public
discourses. ?
Source: PIB and Law Commission of India
25 SePteMBer 2023 29 September 2023
conomic growth is an objective that
every government works for. The
government is required to facilitate
economic growth through policy
initiatives and infrastructure development.
Developing countries in particular also have to
ensure inclusive growth. This requires financing
of various social objectives and public service
Tax policy reform is a continuous process. There are various tax reforms
and administrative initiatives undertaken from time to time. There is
always a time lag in producing desired effect. Tax rate reductions in
particular lead to a reduction in tax collection in the short term. Hence,
the success of tax reforms should be seen over a period of time rather than
analysing each year separately. Ease of doing business is also one area
where tax policies are required to continue to pay attention. It has always
been the effort of the Government to ensure easy compliance with tax laws
as part of its ease of doing business initiative.
programmes. The ability of the government to
live up to these responsibilities largely depends
on the amount of revenue generated through
various sources. Taxation remains one of the major
sources of raising revenues for these objectives,
as it is an instrument of social and economic
engineering. Tax collections help the government
to provide education, healthcare, housing, and
kaMleSh chaNdRa vaRShNey the author is Joint Secretary-(tPL-1), department of revenue, Ministry of finance, Goi. email: jstpl1@nic.in
E
direct t ax r eforms
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