Business
ITR deadline extended for select taxpayers; Check eligibility
New Delhi: The announcement of an extended August 31 income tax return (ITR) deadline in Budget 2026 may have come as a relief to many but it doesn’t apply across the board. The government has opted for a staggered filing schedule to ease peak-season pressure, and the benefit of extra time is limited to specific categories of taxpayers. As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman clarified in her Budget speech, most individual taxpayers will continue to follow the existing deadline while only select groups will qualify for the extended timeline.
No Change In July 31 Deadline For Most Taxpayers
For the majority of individual taxpayers, the July 31 due date remains unchanged. Salaried employees and those filing ITR-1 or ITR-2 will still have to submit their returns by this deadline, as no extension has been granted for this category. This includes employees, pensioners, and individuals earning income from salary, interest, or capital gains. This means they should continue to plan their tax filings just like in previous years.
Who Can File ITR By August 31?
The extended August 31 deadline is not for everyone. According to the Income Tax Department’s FAQs issued after Budget 2026, the benefit applies only to non-audit business cases and certain trusts covered under Section 263(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act, 2025. For these specific categories, the due date has been shifted from July 31 to August 31, while other taxpayers must continue to follow the original timeline.
Understanding Non-Audit Business Cases
Non-audit business cases generally refer to small businesses and professionals who are not required to get their accounts audited. This usually includes entrepreneurs, freelancers, and self-employed individuals whose annual turnover stays below the prescribed audit limit. Typically, that means turnover under Rs 1 crore, or up to Rs 2–3 crore for those who choose the presumptive taxation scheme. These taxpayers have simpler compliance requirements compared to larger businesses that fall under mandatory audit rules.
Why Was The Deadline Extended?
Earlier, these taxpayers were required to file their returns by July 31. The government has now pushed the deadline to August 31 to provide additional time for compliance. The move aims to ease last-minute rush, reduce filing pressure during peak season, and ensure smoother return submissions under the new Income Tax framework.
Business
‘Crisis worse than two 1970s oil shocks put together’: IEA chief’s big warning on Strait of Hormuz – The Times of India
The ongoing war in the Middle East has triggered an energy crisis for the world and “no country is immune” to its shockwaves, the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned on Monday. Addressing the National Press Club in Australia’s capital, Birol said the current situation has evolved into an unprecedented disruption, combining multiple shocks to oil and gas supplies.“This crisis as things stand is now two oil crises and one gas crash put all together,” he said. He also drew comparisons with the oil shocks of the 1970s and the fallout from Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.Highlighting the broader economic risks, Birol said, “The global economy is facing a major, major threat today, and I very much hope that this issue will be resolved as soon as possible.”Commenting on the fallout of the energy crisis, Fatih Birol said, “no country will be immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues to go in this direction,” adding, “so there is a need for global efforts.”The conflict has already caused extensive damage to energy infrastructure, with Birol noting that at least forty facilities across nine countries in the region have been “severely or very severely damaged”.“At least forty… energy assets in the region are severely or very severely damaged across nine countries,” he said.The disruption was intensified by the near shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, a key transit route for roughly one-fifth of global oil and gas shipments. The standoff has deepened as the war entered its fourth week, with Donald Trump and Tehran issuing repeated threats, including Washington’s demand for the reopening of the waterway.Birol identified the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz as the most critical step towards stabilising the situation, while also flagging rising fuel shortages in Asia as a growing concern. Oil markets reflected the strain, with US benchmark crude briefly touching the $100-per-barrel mark early on Monday. As fuel prices continue to rise, he added that there would not be any specific crude level to trigger another release.He added that the agency is currently consulting governments worldwide and remains prepared to release additional oil from emergency reserves if needed, though he clarified that no specific price level would automatically trigger such a move. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump issued an ultimatum to Iran to reopen the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, warning of military consequences if it failed to comply. He said, “If Iran doesn’t fully open, without threat, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 hours from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various power plants, starting with the biggest one first! Thank you for your attention to this matter.” In response, Tehran warned, signalling that any attack on its energy infrastructure would prompt retaliation beyond conventional military targets. The message was conveyed by Ebrahim Zolfaghari and carried by Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting. He said any strike on Iran’s fuel and energy sector would trigger action against a broader range of targets linked to the United States and its regional allies.Earlier this month, 32 member nations of the IEA agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil from their emergency reserves to the market, to deal with the ongoing energy supply disruption.
Business
MAC entices staff to transform into TikTok live shopping hosts
A major beauty brand is enticing all its UK employees to earn a cut of any sales they drive on TikTok Shop in a bid to cash in on the rapid rise of the influencer-led beauty market.
MAC Cosmetics is kitting out shops with mini studios for its makeup artists to host live shopping shows when it launches on TikTok Shop on April 2.
It says it is the first major beauty brand in the UK to give every member of staff the opportunity to opt in as an affiliate and sell on the social media platform.
Those who become faces of the live channel will be offered a percentage of any sale that they drive on TikTok Shop.
The makeup artists will be encouraged to host tutorials and product demonstrations, with items available to buy directly through the app.
MAC, which is part of the Estee Lauder group of beauty brands, said the first live shopping show will stream from its Carnaby Street store in London.
It is hoping that tapping into social media shoppers will also bring more people into its more than 230 standalone shops and concessions.
TikTok Shop burst onto the UK’s retail scene in 2021 and, in recent years, has become a significant force in the world of e-commerce, reaching millions of people who use the video-sharing app and converting many into shoppers with a few taps.
Many content creators can earn a commission on products that they sell through the app when they co-operate with a brand or retailer.
Major retailers like Marks & Spencer and Sainsbury’s are now selling products on the marketplace alongside thousands of smaller businesses and brands.
The app has particularly been part of a boom for the beauty market, with beauty sales on the platform soaring by 60% year-on-year in 2025, fuelled by trends such as Korean skincare.
But the spread of in-app shopping has also prompted concerns about so-called impulse buying, particularly among younger consumers who are often targeted by influencer-led marketing.
Sara Staniford, the vice president and general manager of MAC in the UK and Ireland, said: “MAC has always been driven by our artists and the communities they create.
“TikTok Shop gives us an exciting new way to celebrate that creativity and connect with beauty lovers in real time.
“It puts our artists exactly where they belong, at the centre of the conversation.”
Business
Privatisation of state enterprises | The Express Tribune
Answer to dilemma is sure-fire sale of bankrupt SOEs in unchaotic and transparent manner
BRUSSELS:
Rule number one is that the role of government is to govern and not run a business. State-owned enterprises (SOEs) have been a huge drain on Pakistan’s fiscal solvency since decades. Staggering losses over the years and the accumulated liabilities absorbed by the national exchequer (read: taxpayers) through subsidies, guarantees and debt have suffocated Pakistan.
Total SOEs’ liabilities have climbed to Rs9.6 trillion, roughly half of the annual federal budget. Unfunded pension obligations alone stand at Rs2 trillion. Out of the Rs13 trillion collected in federal taxes, about Rs2.1 trillion was redirected towards SOEs in 2025 just to keep them afloat. With mounting losses and negative equity of these white elephants, a comprehensive plan for wholesale privatisation of SOEs needs to be developed and, more importantly, implemented on an urgent basis. Yet the current government, like those before it, keep procrastinating the urgent need to privatise these entities.
So, the question to ask is why? The most obvious answer is “retaining control” not for economic rationalisation but for political control. It is the political leadership and state bureaucracy that “throw a monkey wrench” into any plans for privatisation.
Their combined objective is not to increase their economic value but to use them as tools to maintain a patronage system to reward loyalists to SOE boards that exist in name but lack authority, a management that has never run a private business, a bloated employment with excess wages and benefits.
The subordination of economic efficiency to their self-interests inevitably means an incentive to “drag their feet” and/or backtrack on reforms. Bureaucratic inertia and political reluctance, coupled with resistance from vested interests, continues to stall meaningful change, adding to the burden of taxpayers.
The annual report on the federal SOEs (2024-2025) by the Central Monitoring Unit (CMU) in the Ministry of Finance highlights the deep-rooted problems of the public sector to the poor leadership that is unable to run it as a viable commercial enterprise. The CMU recommendations – stronger boards, timely audits, better disclosure and performance-based accountability – are not new.
The CMU fails to understand the nature of business. SOEs cannot function as a sustainable business, any effort to restructure with half measures or cosmetic changes will only give the same results and be an arduous exercise in futility. Private sector businesses with their boards, management and employees are beholden and answerable to their shareholders. Financial health of these companies are annually scrutinised to improve performance and increase economic value.
SOEs on the other hand are beholden and answerable to politicians and bureaucrats, who care less about financial health because it’s not their money on the line, it’s the taxpayers’ money and it is they who “bear the brunt” of these massive losses.
So, what’s the answer to this dilemma? Nothing but a sure-fire sale of these bankrupt SOEs must be done urgently in an unchaotic and transparent manner. Questionable opaque methods of transferring the assets of struggling or bankrupt SOEs to private entities, foreign or domestic, must be avoided. The exit of these SOEs will create opportunities for the private sector to eclipse the state sector as the most important engine of growth, productivity, and job creation in finance, energy, utilities, transport, manufacturing and mining.
Revenues from the privatisation sales will go a long way to help Pakistan’s fiscal quandary, but even more. So the removal of these businesses from Pakistan’s ownership ledgers eases the headache for the government to oversee their operations so that it can focus on governance and utilise a significant portion of public resources on development, education and healthcare rather than keeping these loss-making state entities alive.
The writer is a philanthropist and an economist based in Belgium
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