Regulatory and Digital Reforms Driving India’s Business Environment Transformation 1. Union Budget 2026–27 reiterates Ease of Doing Business as a growth pillar, prioritising digitisation, tax certainty, investor access and litigation reduction to strengthen confidence across sectors nationwide. 2. An interconnected single digital window for cargo approvals is proposed, enabling streamlined customs clearances, reduced interface duplication, faster releases, and lower compliance friction for trade participants and paperwork. 3. Customs Integrated System will be rolled out within two years as an integrated, scalable platform covering end-to-end customs processes, improving interoperability, traceability, and predictability for trade. 4. Non-intrusive scanning using imaging and AI-enabled risk assessment will expand in phases, targeting scanning of every container across major ports to tighten security and reduce delays. 5. Trusted importers will be recognised in risk systems, cutting physical verification, enabling electronically sealed factory-to-ship export clearance, and facilitating immediate release on arrival for compliant filings. 6. For goods without compliance requirements, customs clearance will occur immediately after online registration by the importer, subject to duty payment, shortening dwell time and improving logistics efficiency overall. 7. Portfolio Investment Scheme access is widened for individuals resident outside India to invest in listed equity instruments, enhancing market liquidity and broadening foreign investor participation pathways significantly overall. 8. Individual PROI investment limit under PIS is proposed to rise from 5% to 10%, while the overall ceiling for individual PROIs rises to 24% from 10% in aggregate. 9. Minimum Alternate Tax is proposed as levy at 14% instead of 15%, aiming to reduce disputes, improve certainty, and simplify settlement of MAT liabilities for firms in India. 10. Non-residents paying presumptive tax are proposed to be exempt from MAT, supporting predictable taxation and lowering friction for global businesses operating under presumptive income frameworks in India. 11. MAT credit set-off in the new regime is proposed up to one-fourth of tax liability, easing costs and improving cash-flow planning for firms shifting regimes. 12. Integrated assessment and penalty proceedings through a common order are proposed, with no interest on penalty during appeal and reduced pre-payment requirement from 20% to 10% thereby. 13. Return updating is proposed even after reassessment initiation, with an additional 10% tax above the applicable rate, enabling voluntary self-correction for taxpayers and reducing prolonged disputes materially. 14. Immunity from penalty and prosecution framework is extended from underreporting to misreporting, requiring payment of 100% additional income tax over tax and interest due in specified eligible cases. 15. Duty deferral period for Tier-2 and Tier-3 Authorised Economic Operators is extended from 15 to 30 days, supporting ‘Clear first, pay later’ for time-sensitive production. Trust-based systems Enhanced the duty deferral period for Tier 2 and Tier 3 Authorised Economic Operators (AEO), from 15 days to 30 days. What does it mean? Deferred duty payment is a mechanism for delinking duty payment and Customs clearance. It is based on the principle ‘Clear first-Pay later’. The aim is to have a seamless wharf to warehouse transit in order to facilitate just-in-time manufacturing. The enhancement in the duty deferral period means extending the time allowed to pay customs or import duties after goods are imported, instead of paying them immediately. Other Single Window Digital Platforms PARIVESH (Pro-Active and Responsive facilitation by Interactive, Virtuous, and Environmental Single Window Hub) 3.0 For environmental clearances and post-approval compliance monitoring. It integrates baseline data, afforestation land banks, inter-ministerial dashboards, and AI-enabled support to enhance transparency, predictability, and efficiency. e-Gram SWARAJ portal Provides a single window with the complete Profile of the GP, including details of Sarpanch/Secretary, demography, finances, assets along with activities taken up through the Gram Panchayat Development Plan (GPDP). Serving as a unified reporting and tracking platform, it strengthens decentralised planning and improves the effectiveness of development fund utilisation. Achievements of States under BRAP Kerala Streamlined business registration Digitised land and tax processes, Simplified environmental clearances, and advanced renewable energy adoption, carbon-neutral gram panchayats, and waterbody rejuvenation. Tamil Nadu Introduced single-window Digitised approvals alongside land reforms, while promoting solar parks, decarbonisation plans, Effective monitoring of industrial effluent treatment systems. Andhra Pradesh Implemented single-window industrial clearances, Online land registration, E-environmental approvals, Expanded its Online Consent Management & Monitoring System allowing firms to apply for consents and track approvals digitally — Must Know Terms : 1.Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) Ease of Doing Business refers to a reform-driven framework aimed at simplifying regulatory procedures, reducing compliance costs, and improving predictability for enterprises. In India, EoDB focuses on digitisation, decriminalisation of minor offences, tax certainty, and trust-based governance to enhance investor confidence, promote entrepreneurship, improve competitiveness, and integrate domestic firms with global value chains effectively. 2.Customs Integrated System (CIS) The Customs Integrated System is a proposed unified digital platform designed to integrate all customs-related processes into a single, scalable architecture. CIS aims to replace fragmented systems, enabling seamless data sharing, end-to-end cargo tracking, faster clearances, improved risk assessment, and enhanced transparency. It supports reduced transaction costs, predictability in trade logistics, and improved ease for importers and exporters. 3.Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) Minimum Alternate Tax is a tax mechanism introduced to ensure companies with substantial book profits pay a minimum level of tax despite exemptions. Under recent reforms, MAT is proposed as a final tax at a reduced rate of 14 percent, improving tax certainty, lowering litigation, enabling better financial planning, and reducing prolonged disputes between taxpayers and tax authorities. 4.Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS) The Portfolio Investment Scheme regulates equity investments by persons resident outside India in listed Indian companies. Recent enhancements permit wider access and higher investment limits for individual foreign investors. These reforms aim to deepen capital markets, improve liquidity, diversify investor participation, and align India’s financial markets with global investment practices and standards. 5.Authorised Economic Operator (AEO) Programme The Authorised Economic Operator programme accredits compliant and trusted trade entities, granting them facilitative benefits in customs procedures. Enhanced duty deferral periods and preferential treatment under risk management systems reduce inspections and delays. The programme strengthens supply chain
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