EconTweets
πΌ Oracle Fires ~30,000 Globally β India Hit Hardest with ~12,000 Layoffs, All via a 6AM Email
In what is being described as possibly the largest layoff in Oracle’s history, the US tech giant cut roughly 20,000β30,000 employees globally on March 31, 2026. India was the worst-hit geography, with approximately 12,000 employees β out of Oracle’s ~30,000 India headcount β reportedly receiving termination notices. The method: a cold, standardised email arriving at 6 AM IST with no prior manager warning, no HR call, and system access revoked shortly after.
The cuts span engineering, cloud, Oracle Health, Sales, Customer Success, and NetSuite divisions. The restructuring is directly tied to Oracle’s aggressive pivot toward AI infrastructure β the company has committed to over $150 billion in AI data centre investments, including a $50 billion debt raise to fund its AI buildout alongside OpenAI’s Stargate project. TD Cowen had flagged in January that Oracle needed to cut $8β10 billion in costs to fund these commitments. A second wave of layoffs is expected within a month in India. Oracle has not officially confirmed the numbers.
βοΈ Airfares Set to Surge Today β Jet Fuel Price Nearly Doubled in 4 Weeks Due to West Asia War
Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) prices are being revised today (April 1 is the monthly revision date), and the revision is expected to be steep. Global jet fuel prices nearly doubled β from $95.9 per barrel on February 20 to nearly $197 per barrel by March 20 β driven by supply disruptions linked to the US-Israel-Iran war and Strait of Hormuz tensions. Airlines like Air India and Akasa Air have already begun imposing fuel surcharges on domestic (βΉ399ββΉ425 base) and international routes (up to βΉ3,000+).
Fuel accounts for 35β45% of airline operating costs. Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu has urged state governments to cut VAT on ATF (Delhi levies 25%, Maharashtra 18%, Tamil Nadu ~29%) to soften the blow. The government is in discussions with the Petroleum Ministry on cushioning the impact, but for passengers planning summer travel, advance booking is strongly advised. Longer flight paths due to West Asia airspace restrictions are adding further cost pressure.
π Census 2027 Phase 1 Launches Today β India’s First Digital Census After a 15-Year Gap
India’s long-pending census exercise officially begins today with Phase 1: the Houselisting and Housing Census, kicking off after a 15-year gap. The last census was conducted in 2011; the 2021 census was deferred due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This time, the exercise is India’s first fully digital census β data will be collected through mobile apps and a dedicated monitoring portal. Phase 2 (population enumeration) will follow in early 2027.
Significantly, Census 2027 will for the first time collect caste data and disability data in a comprehensive, digital manner, making it a landmark exercise for social policymaking. The data will have far-reaching implications for OBC reservation policies, welfare scheme targeting, infrastructure planning, and India’s demographic dividend narrative heading into Viksit Bharat 2047.
π SEBI’s New Gold & Silver ETF Valuation Rules β What Changes from Today
SEBI’s revised framework for Gold and Silver ETFs comes into effect from April 1, 2026. The new rules change how these ETFs calculate their Net Asset Value (NAV) β specifically the price benchmarks and valuation methodology used to mark the gold/silver holdings. The key intent is to improve pricing transparency and align domestic ETF valuations more closely with international spot prices, reducing arbitrage gaps.
For retail investors holding Gold ETFs or Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGB), the new rules mean NAV figures may fluctuate differently from before β not because the underlying gold price changed, but because the calculation method updated. Secondary market SGB investors also face a new tax change: capital gains tax now applies on SGBs when sold on the exchange (previously, there was ambiguity on this). Investors are advised to check their fund house communications for specific impact on existing holdings.
π IMF Warns: US-Iran War Could Reshape Global Economy β Higher Prices, Slower Growth Ahead
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has flagged that the ongoing US-Israel and Iran conflict is testing global economic resilience. The halt in shipments through the Strait of Hormuz β through which roughly 20% of global oil trade passes β and damage to energy infrastructure have triggered a surge in crude and gas prices. The IMF warns that all scenarios point toward higher inflation and slower global growth, with Global GDP growth projected at 2.9% in 2026.
For India, the spillovers are multi-channel: rising ATF costs (as seen above), higher crude oil import bills (India imports ~87% of its oil), wider current account deficit, and rupee depreciation pressure. However, India’s Petroleum Minister has assured Parliament that domestic fuel availability is secure, with refineries operating above 100% capacity and India having diversified oil supply chains after the US-India trade deal limited Russian oil imports.
ποΈ India’s 65-Year-Old Income Tax Act Retired β New Law Takes Effect Today
The Income Tax Act of 1961, which governed how every Indian paid taxes for over six decades, is officially replaced today by the Income Tax Act, 2025. The overhaul slashes the law’s complexity from 819 sections to 536, introduces a single “Tax Year” concept, and updates compliance rules across the board. Tax slabs remain unchanged β so your take-home pay is unaffected β but how you file, report, and interact with the tax system has fundamentally changed.
π Finance Act 2026 Notified β FY27 Budget Now Live
President Droupadi Murmu gave assent to the Finance Act 2026 on 30th March, making the Union Budget 2026-27 legally operational from today. The budget sets total expenditure at βΉ53.47 lakh crore, with a record βΉ12.2 lakh crore for capital investment in infrastructure β roads, railways, ports, and freight corridors. The fiscal deficit target is tightened to 4.3% of GDP (from 4.4% in FY26), continuing India’s path of fiscal consolidation.
π° Small Savings Rates Frozen for AprilβJune 2026
The Finance Ministry has left interest rates on all 10 small savings schemes β including PPF, NSC, and Sukanya Samriddhi β unchanged for the first quarter of FY27. PPF continues at 7.1% per annum, Senior Citizen Savings Scheme at a healthy 8.2%, and the Post Office time deposits between 6.9β7.5%. For crores of small savers and households, the status quo means predictable returns β a relief amid global interest rate uncertainty.
π· Code on Wages: Salary Structures to Change β More PF, Smaller Take-Home
A long-pending labour reform kicks in from today: under the Code on Wages, basic salary plus dearness allowance must now be at least 50% of an employee’s total CTC (Cost to Company). For years, companies kept basic pay artificially low to minimise PF and gratuity outflows. That loophole closes today β meaning Provident Fund contributions rise, gratuity payouts grow larger, but monthly take-home salary may dip slightly. Think of it as paying less now but saving much more for retirement.
The New Income Tax Act, 2025: India’s Biggest Direct Tax Overhaul in 65 Years
π WHY β The Root Cause
The Income Tax Act of 1961 was drafted for a very different India β one with few taxpayers, limited financial products, and no internet. Over 65 years, every Budget added new sections, sub-sections, provisos, and exceptions until the law ballooned to 819 sections across 47 chapters, written in dense legal language that even qualified professionals found confusing.
Think of it like an old house that’s been extended room-by-room for 65 years. Each addition made sense at the time, but the overall structure became a maze β difficult to navigate, easy to misinterpret, and costly to maintain. The result? High litigation (India has one of the world’s highest tax dispute rates), low voluntary compliance, and enormous compliance costs for ordinary citizens and small businesses.
π WHAT β Precisely What Has Changed
The new law strips the old Act down and rebuilds it. Here’s what’s new:
- “Tax Year” replaces Previous Year + Assessment Year. Under the old law, income earned in 2025-26 (called “Previous Year”) was assessed in 2026-27 (called “Assessment Year”). This two-year terminology confused everyone. Now, a single Tax Year covers both β income earned from April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2027 is filed and assessed as Tax Year 2026-27. Simple.
- Smaller, cleaner law. From 819 sections to 536 sections, and from 511 rules to 333 rules. Every redundant provision is removed.
- HRA expands to 8 cities. The 50% House Rent Allowance exemption now covers Hyderabad and Bengaluru in addition to Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai β a big win for IT hub residents. But stricter: you must now disclose the landlord’s PAN.
- Higher STT on F&O trading. Securities Transaction Tax on futures and options derivatives has been raised β making derivative trading more expensive for retail investors.
- ITR-3/4 deadline extended to August 31 (from July 31) for business owners, freelancers, and self-employed professionals. Salaried individuals’ July 31 deadline is unchanged.
- Crypto gets formal recognition. Virtual Digital Assets (VDA) β cryptocurrencies, NFTs β are explicitly defined. Gains taxed at a flat 30%, with no deductions other than acquisition cost.
- Zero tax for income up to βΉ12 lakh continues. The 87A rebate of βΉ60,000 ensuring tax-free income up to βΉ12 lakh (βΉ12.75 lakh for salaried) remains intact under the new regime.
βοΈ HOW β The Mechanism
Simplification in tax law works through what economists call reduced compliance costs. Every hour a taxpayer or CA spends deciphering the law is a real economic cost β a dead-weight loss that neither the government collects nor the taxpayer keeps. Simpler laws reduce these costs, encouraging more people to file honestly and voluntarily.
The shift from a two-year (FY + AY) system to a single Tax Year also reduces a specific form of confusion that economists call cognitive tax burden β the mental energy spent just understanding when you owe what. Internationally, most major economies use a single tax year concept; India was an outlier.
The higher STT on derivatives works differently β it’s a Pigouvian-style tax. Policymakers believe heavy retail participation in F&O trading creates systemic risk and often leads to retail losses. Higher transaction costs deliberately reduce excessive speculation, nudging savers toward equity and mutual funds instead.
The switch to a single “Tax Year” isn’t just semantic. It changes how losses are carried forward, how appeal deadlines are counted, and how software, Form 16, and tax assessments are structured. For multinational companies and NRIs β used to single-year tax concepts globally β this is a huge simplification. For India’s 80 million+ ITR filers, it means less confusion. CBDT has even released a section-mapping tool to help professionals transition.
If India’s tax disputes currently lock up crores of rupees in litigation for years, does simplifying tax language automatically reduce disputes? Or do disputes arise for other reasons β aggressive tax administration, ambiguous policy intent, or human interpretation gaps that no law can fully close? What else would need to change alongside the law?
India’s direct tax system underwent its most significant structural overhaul in six decades when the Income Tax Act, 2025 replaced the 1961 legislation effective April 1, 2026. This reform β reducing the law from 819 to 536 sections β represents a shift from reactive patch-up amendments to proactive architectural redesign, aimed at simplifying compliance, reducing litigation, and modernising India’s tax ecosystem.
- Structural simplification: The law consolidates 819 sections into 536, eliminating decades of redundant provisos, contradictory clauses, and ambiguous language. The single “Tax Year” concept replaces the confusing FY/AY dual-year system, aligning India with international standards and reducing cognitive burden for 80 million+ taxpayers and multinational firms.
- Simplified language reduces professional dependency for straightforward filings
- CBDT’s section-mapping tool eases ecosystem transition (software, forms, advisories)
- Compliance improvements: Extended deadlines for ITR-3/4 (business owners, freelancers) to August 31 provides meaningful relief. Broader HRA exemption (to 8 cities including Hyderabad and Bengaluru) improves equity. PAN-based TDS for property purchases eliminates TAN requirement.
- Tighter HRA rules (mandatory PAN/landlord disclosure) improve data integrity and reduce evasion
- Formal recognition of VDAs (crypto, NFTs) at 30% flat tax brings clarity to digital economy
- Revenue and equity measures: Higher STT on F&O derivatives addresses the SEBI concern about speculative retail trading leading to household financial losses. Removal of interest deduction on dividend income plugs a misuse channel for leveraged dividend investors.
- MAT credit freeze (no new credits post April 1, 2026) tightens corporate tax planning
- Limitations and concerns: Law simplification alone cannot resolve tax disputes rooted in administration culture. Transition costs (software overhauls, re-training, form revisions) are substantial. Small businesses may face temporary confusion during the ecosystem shift. The HRA landlord PAN rule, while well-intentioned, creates friction in rental markets.
- Tax certainty requires not just clear law but consistent interpretation β judicial and administrative
The new Income Tax Act signals India’s intent to build a modern, compliance-friendly direct tax framework. However, its success will be determined not by legislative text alone but by institutional follow-through β consistent interpretation, faster dispute resolution via faceless assessment, and technology-led enforcement. Paired with “GST 2.0” reforms on the indirect tax side, India is building a comprehensive 21st-century tax architecture.
India Union Budget β FY26 vs FY27 Key Numbers (βΉ Lakh Crore)
Small Savings Scheme Interest Rates β Q1 FY2026-27 (AprilβJune 2026)
Union Budget FY2026-27 β At a Glance
| Indicator | FY2025-26 (RE) | FY2026-27 (BE) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Expenditure | βΉ49.6 lakh cr | βΉ53.47 lakh cr | β² +7.7% |
| Capital Expenditure | βΉ11.2 lakh cr | βΉ12.2 lakh cr | β² +8.9% |
| Fiscal Deficit (% GDP) | 4.4% | 4.3% | βΌ -0.1 pp |
| Gross Market Borrowing | β | βΉ17.2 lakh cr | β |
| Gross Tax Revenue | β | βΉ44.04 lakh cr | β² ~8% |
| Nominal GDP Growth (Est.) | 8% | 10% | β² +2 pp |
| Debt-to-GDP Ratio | 56.1% | 55.6% | βΌ -0.5 pp |
A single unified time period β April 1 to March 31 β during which you earn income AND file your tax return. Replaces the old confusing system where income was earned in the “Previous Year” and assessed in the “Assessment Year” β a year later.
The gap between what the government spends and what it earns (through taxes + non-tax revenue). To fill this gap, the government borrows money β mostly by issuing bonds (G-Secs). India’s target for FY27: 4.3% of GDP.
Government spending that creates long-term assets β roads, railways, ports, schools, hospitals. Unlike revenue expenditure (paying salaries, subsidies), capex builds things that keep delivering value for decades. India’s FY27 capex: βΉ12.2 lakh crore.
Government-backed savings instruments β mostly operated through post offices β offering guaranteed interest rates. Include PPF (Public Provident Fund), NSC (National Savings Certificate), Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana, Senior Citizen Savings Scheme, and others. Rates are set quarterly by the Finance Ministry.
A tax levied on every purchase or sale of securities (shares, futures, options) on stock exchanges. The new Income Tax Act raises STT specifically on F&O (Futures & Options) derivatives, making each trade more costly. Revenue goes directly to the government and doesn’t require annual filing.
A component of salaried income that can be partially or fully exempted from tax if you live in rented accommodation. The exemption amount depends on your salary, actual rent paid, and the city β metro cities get a 50% exemption (now expanded to 8 cities including Hyderabad and Bengaluru), non-metro cities get 40%.
The new law formally defines Virtual Digital Assets β cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.), NFTs, and digital tokens β and subjects gains to a flat 30% tax. No deductions except the cost of purchase. Losses from VDAs cannot offset gains from other income sources.