Business Standard

SINGLE-PAGE FORM FOR INCOME UP TO ~50 LAKH

Only for salaried; Jaitley’s earlier promise was for annual income up to ~5 lakh

- DILASHA SETH

To encourage more individual­s to file returns and widen the tax net, the government is set to introduce a single-page income tax (I-T) return form from April 1.

This will be for those with annual salaried income up to ~50 lakh, much higher than ~5-lakh limit proposed in the Union Budget, Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia told Business Standard.

He added this would only be for those with salaried and one house rent income.

There are 290 million PAN card holders (the I-T dept identifica­tion) but only 60 mn return filers.

Currently, the I-T form is three pages. It was simplified two years ago, when a controvers­ial provision for mandatory disclosure of foreign trips and dormant bank accounts was removed.

“To expand the tax net, I also plan to have a simple one-page form to be filed as I-T Return for the category of individual­s having taxable income up to ~5 lakh, other than business income,” Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced in the 2017-18 Budget.

Of the 7.6 million individual assessees who declare annual income above ~5 lakh, 5.6 mn are in the salaried class.

For those with annual income of over ~50 lakh and up to ~1 crore, a surcharge of 10 per cent will be imposed; 15 per cent for those over ~1 crore. The surcharge is estimated to generate additional revenue of ~2,500 crore.

Many salaried people do not file returns as it is cumbersome. And, their IT dues are already taken through Tax Deduction at Source (TDS), which is 37 per cent of gross direct tax collection. Its contributi­on during 2015-16 was ~3.25 lakh crore, growth of 11.6 per cent over the previous financial year.

TDS payers might have a tax liability on account of income from other sources, which quite a few avoid paying.

Those who do not file their I-T returns (ITRs) on time will have to pay a penalty of up to ~10,000 from the 2018-19 assessment year (AY). It will be ~5,000 if the return is furnished after the due date but on or before December 31 of the AY. However, for payers with total income not exceeding ~5 lakh, the fee for late return filing will be ~1,000.

An individual whose income exceeds ~2.5 lakh in 2016-17 is required to file an ITR. The number of non-filers with potential tax liabilitie­s has risen from an estimated 2.21 million in 2014 to 5.89 million in 2015. Non-filers in 2013 were 1.22 million.

The direct tax collection target for 2016-17 is ~8.47 lakh crore, about 14.1 per cent more than a year before.

“Increasing the coverage with a simplified ITR is a good move. It will ensure many of the salaried who do not file a return feel encouraged to do so. A lot of details are already there in the system, doing away with the need to fill the details yourself. With more informatio­n with the government, in future there might not even be a need to file a return,” said Neeru Ahuja of consultanc­y Deloitte.

A person with annual income up to ~5 lakh and filing return for the first time would not be subjected to any scrutiny in the first year, unless there is specific informatio­n with the department regarding high-value transactio­ns.

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