
A flat 40% tax on IPL profits earned by the BCCI could have generated nearly ₹15,000 crore over the last three years. To put that number in perspective that amount is enough to build around 10 new IITs, upgrade public universities, or significantly boost research funding in India. This is not about taxing cricket or hurting sports, it’s about understanding opportunity cost. When large, high-profit entities operate outside the regular tax net, the question isn’t legality, but policy balance. Every rupee not taxed is a rupee the government must recover elsewhere, often from the salaried middle class. The real debate is simple: should high-profit entertainment bodies be treated differently from other commercial enterprises? 🔔 Follow @myfintaxofficial & @casurajsoni for daily finance updates, IPO news & market insights!
This post was published on 15th December, 2025 by Suraj on his Instagram handle "@myfintaxofficial (MYFINTAX | Finance & Tax Educator | CA Suraj Soni)". Suraj has total 159.0K followers on Instagram and has a total of 2.8K post. Suraj receives an average engagement rate of 1.77% per post on Instagram. This post has received 4 comments which are lower than the average comments that Suraj gets. Overall the engagement rate for this post was lower than the average for the profile.