Having learned to live with the two eternal constants—death and taxes—the aam aadmi is waking up to a third nightmare: inflation. With so signs of the price spiral letting up, and Budget 2011 not expanding room for manoeuvre, crafting an effective investment plan remains a tough task. Outlook Money offers a primer to make the most of these testing times.
| Real Estate | ||
| Proposal | Impact | |
| One per cent interest subvention for housing loans. Limit has been increased to cover housing loans of Rs 15 lakh where the value of the house is not more than Rs 25 lakh. | The enhanced limit will benefit people in lower income groups. However, given that property prices in metros are unreasonable and demand is high, the search for affordable purchases will push consumers to the suburbs. Look for value deals. | |
| The limit for housing loans in the affordable category raised to Rs 25 lakh from Rs 20 lakh. | This addresses price escalation. Will also benefit people who purchase property in Tier-II and Tier-III cities. | |
| The setting up of a Central Electronic Registry under the sarfesai Act, 2002, to prevent frauds in loan cases involving multiple lending from different banks on the same immovable property. | This will help clean up the housing finance market. Fraudsters would be unable to take multiple loans for the same property and legal checks on the property will eventually be possible. This is also a move towards electronic registry of residential units. | |
| “The affordable housing sector will get a boost from these proposals. Once you’ve identified a property to buy in the Rs 30 lakh bracket, ask the lending institution if the project has been approved by them or not.” Pranab Datta, vice-chairman & MD, Knight Frank (India) |
| “Service tax on hospital bills is currently paid by the insurance companies and hospitals have to bear the cost. To create a level-playing field, the FM has now announced that no matter who pays the bills, there will be a service tax.” Bhargav Dasgupta, CEO & MD, ICICI Lombard General Insurance |

Shalender Kanodia, 36, Senior Manager, Perfect Accounting |
My investments: Approximately 15 per cent of savings in shares and 30-35 per cent in mutual funds; remaining savings in LIC endowment policies, and Public Provident Fund (PPF).
My take on Budget 2011: I am disappointed; there is nothing much for an individual in the budget. I was expecting a number of things from the finance minister. However, I got just a Rs 20,000 increase in the income exemption slab, which is actually peanuts. Moreover, nothing much in the budget to check growing inflation. Apart from that, a new income exemption slab been introduced for 'very senior citizens'. It's of no use because very few people in that category have any income.
| “I think there is nothing overall in the budget that should make market sentiments negative. The current market provides an extremely attractive level. All the negatives seemed to have already been priced in. From hereon, the outlook for the next 12 months looks positive.” A. Sandip Sabharwal, CEO-PMS, Prabhudas Lilladher |

| Sakshi Gupta, 24, Manager, Indofil Industries, Mumbai My investments: Rs 15,000 monthly in SIP and yearly investment in infrastructure bonds and PPF for tax-saving. No loans. |
My take on Budget 2011: There was no further IT relaxation for women. No excise duty increase is a boost for the manufacturing industry and market sentiments. Increased service tax on AC restaurants serving liquor, branded clothes, air travel and other luxuries is going to increase my indirect tax payments. The Direct Tax Code is proposed to be implemented from April 1, 2012, so hopeful it's on time.
| “If the Indian economy is growing at 8 per cent or above, it means growth for the capital market as well. Investors should remain focused on their own asset allocation rather than going for a specific theme.” A. Balasubramanian, CEO, Birla Mutual Fund |
Utpal Mukherjee, 50, works for PwC, Calcutta |
My investments: All investments in PPFs, as I believe only in government investments. No direct or indirect equity exposure. Have home loan EMIs for another 11 years and a car loan.
My take on Budget 2011: A higher IT exemption till Rs 2 lakh would have been better. The subsidy of 1 per cent on home loans up to Rs 15 lakh a good move for the middle class. Prices of some electronic goods like ACs, refrigerators to come down, which is a positive.
| “I didn't expect too many things as DTC would be applicable from next year. The government probably didn’t want to do things that would have a shelf life of just a year. There has been a minor relief for the common man, especially for the lower-end assessee.” Amitabh Singh, Partner (tax & regulatory services), Ernst & Young |

K.S. Ranganna, 78, retired executive, Chennai |
My investments: No investments in stockmarket or MFs. No yearly investments, existing investments all in fixed deposits. No loans.
My take on Budget 2011: Tax-free slab for senior citizens over 60 years has been raised only by Rs 10,000. It should have been increased to Rs 3 lakh. Medical bills and hospitalisation costs going up is not good news for people my age. There should have been a proposal to give senior citizens the benefit of higher interest rates on bank FDs.

| Disclaimer: Outlook and Outlook Money do not accept responsibility for any investment decision taken by readers on the basis of the information given here. The objective is to keep readers better informed and help them decide for themselves. |









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