UKIBC Urges Tax Cuts, Investor Reforms in India's 2026 Budget

The UK India Business Council has outlined key recommendations for India's Union Budget 2026-27, focusing on creating a more investor-friendly climate. It advocates for simplifying the tax regime, including exemptions on capital gains for foreign portfolio investors and reviving a manufacturing-linked lower tax rate. The council also emphasizes the need to strengthen GIFT City, streamline GST compliance, and introduce policies to boost sectors like clean energy and telecom. These reforms aim to enhance India's global competitiveness and deepen economic collaboration with the UK.

Key Points: UKIBC's Budget 2026 Wishlist: Tax Rationalisation & FDI Reforms

  • Capital gains tax exemptions for FPIs
  • Strengthen GIFT City as financial hub
  • Simplify GST compliance
  • Incentives for telecom & clean energy
  • Overhaul tax dispute resolution
2 min read

UKIBC calls for tax rationalisation, investor-friendly reforms in Budget 2026

UK India Business Council calls for capital gains tax exemptions for FPIs, simplified GST, and policies to boost clean energy & manufacturing in Budget 2026.

"provide increased access to global investors through expanding framework and allowing Indian companies to list equity shares on foreign stock exchange - UKIBC"

New Delhi, Jan 29

The UK India Business Council on Thursday called for a simplified tax regime through exemptions on capital tax gains from foreign portfolio investors FPIs and other investor-friendly reforms from Union Budget 2026-27.

The business advisory body also called for strengthening the GIFT City proposition as a globally competitive financial services hub, simplified GST compliance, incentives and support for the telecom sector.

It urged the government "to provide increased access to global investors through expanding framework and allowing Indian companies to list equity shares on foreign stock exchange."

"UKIBC looks forward to measures that strengthen India's competitiveness as a global trade and investment with innovation, infrastructure development, and sustainable being the centre pillars for economic development and deepening UK-India collaboration," the statement said.

The Budget presents an opportunity to build on recent reforms by enhancing policy certainty, easing business regulatory processes and compliance - thus supporting growth in across sectors such as financial services, manufacturing, clean energy, technology, and Global Capability Centres, it noted.

UKIBC shared hopes of the Budget setting a level-playing field allowing international companies to access the full benefits of FDI liberalisation.

Further, the policy advocacy firm called for a streamlined tax administration that reduces the compliance burden, as well as policies and incentives that facilitate increased adoption of clean energy or infrastructure pan-India.

According to another recent report, business leaders in India voiced strong demand for targeted tax incentives and manufacturing linked lower tax rate regime in anticipation of the Union Budget 2026 and the implementation of the New Income Tax Act.

Around 34 per cent of respondents called for the return of the manufacturing‑linked lower tax rate regime, as many income-tax incentives already expired or approached sunset.

Earlier a lower tax rate of 15 per cent was available to manufacturing units. Another major expectation was the overhaul of the dispute resolution mechanism under direct tax laws, including the introduction of mandatory timelines for the disposal of appeals.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
While attracting foreign investment is important, the Budget must also focus on creating a strong domestic manufacturing ecosystem. Bringing back the 15% tax for manufacturing units is crucial for 'Make in India'. We need to build our own capabilities, not just be a market for others. 🇮🇳
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Rohit P
GIFT City has so much potential! If it becomes a truly world-class financial hub, it can stop the brain drain of our finance talent to Singapore or Dubai. Hope the government listens and provides the right policy push. This is a golden opportunity.
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Sarah B
As someone working in the clean energy sector, the call for incentives for pan-India adoption is spot on. The initial capital cost is still a barrier. Policy certainty and tax benefits can really accelerate our transition to green energy. Good to see this being highlighted.
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Vikram M
The point about overhauling the dispute resolution mechanism is critical. Tax litigation can drag on for years, creating immense uncertainty for businesses. Mandatory timelines for appeal disposal would be a game-changer for investor confidence.
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Karthik V
I respectfully disagree with the call for exemptions on capital gains for FPIs. Why should foreign investors get special treatment? We should first simplify the tax structure for Indian retail investors and MSMEs. Let's strengthen our own house before rolling out the red carpet for everyone else.
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