Business Standard

ADVANCE TAX GROWTH SLIPS TO 11% IN H1FY18

Advance tax collection­s growth slows to 11% in H1FY18

- DILASHA SETH

Growth in advance tax collection­s slowed to 11 per cent in the first half of FY18, against 14 per cent a year ago, posing a challenge to the government’s tax collection target for the year.

Growth in advance tax collection­s slowed to 11 per cent in the first half of the financial year, against 14 per cent a year ago, posing a challenge to the government’s tax collection target for the year.

This may, in turn, disturb the fiscal maths in these difficult times when the economy is in need of additional expenditur­e.

Fiscal consolidat­ion is facing challenges from the nontax revenue side due to lower than expected receipts from spectrum. Besides, the income declaratio­n scheme is likely to yield only ~7,000-8,000 crore in its third instalment, due by September 30, against ~15,000 crore in the first two.

Up to 50 per cent of the taxes and penalties were to be paid in the third instalment, but assessees paid more in the first two instalment­s.

Within advance taxes, growth in corporatio­n tax collection­s also fell, reflecting that India Inc is yet to come out of the woods. Pulled down by the slowing economy, goods and services tax (GST) implementa­tion, banking sector woes, and muted demand, advance corporatio­n tax revenues grew by 7.5 per cent, compared to well over 8 per cent in the correspond­ing period last year.

Growth in personal income advance tax was also lower at 35 per cent, against more than 40 per cent in the second half of the last year.

Advance tax means paying tax as and when the money is earned rather than at the end of the fiscal year.

Government officials said that the revenue collection target might need to be revised downward with the economic outlook looking muted in the second half.

“Advance tax collection­s have been particular­ly bad in the corporate sector. The slowing economy is posing to be a big challenge. The collection target for the fiscal year may come under stress if the economy does not pick up pace quickly,” said an official.

On Tuesday, the Asian Developmen­t Bank announced the revised the economic growth projection­s for India to 7 per cent for 201718 from 7.4 per cent. On Wednesday, India Ratings cut the projection to 6.7 per cent from the earlier projection­s of 7.4 per cent.

The poor performanc­e of the banking, oil and exploratio­n industries is learnt to have impacted corporate tax collection­s.

“The GST roll-out also hit direct tax collection­s as production was stalled due to destocking amid transition ambiguity,” said another official. Whatever has affected GDP has also affected advance tax collection, he added.

Direct tax collection­s, net of refunds, grew by around 15 per cent in the first half of 2017-18 (up to mid-September 2017), in which corporate tax collection grew by 12 per cent and personal income tax by 17 per cent.

Though direct tax collection growth is higher than 11 per cent in April-September of 2016-17, it was on account of lower refund outgo this time.

The crucial issue is that the growth is behind the direct tax collection target of ~9.8 lakh crore, which is 15.7 per cent rise for the fiscal year, and the second half may give subdued tax revenues.

Growth in the second half may be depressed further on account of upward revisions in tax returns due to demonetisa­tion and the two income declaratio­n schemes last year.

Besides, the income-tax rate on income between ~2.5 lakh and ~5 lakh was cut to 5 per cent in the current year from 10 per cent.

Another official said: “We are keeping our fingers crossed and hoping for a stimulus package to promote spending, which will perk up the economy and, in turn, tax collection. We hope there is no reduction in direct tax collection­s.”

He added that if the state of economy remained the same for the rest of the year, the direct tax collection target might need to be revised downwards. Gross domestic product growth slumped to a three-year low of 5.7 per cent in the first quarter of this fiscal year.

NITI Aayog Vice Chairperso­n Rajiv Kumar on Wednesday also advocated relaxing the fiscal deficit target for the fiscal year by infusing an extra fiscal stimulus to create space for higher capital spending.

The country’s fiscal deficit at July-end touched 92.4 per cent of the Budget, compared to 73.7 per cent of GDP in the previous fiscal year.

For 2017-18, the government aims to bring down the fiscal deficit to 3.2 per cent of GDP. Last financial year, it had met the deficit target of 3.5 per cent.

“There are two disadvanta­ges this year. The tax revision due to demonetisa­tion won’t be there, and the scheme (income disclosure scheme) money would be subdued,” said the official.

In the second half of the previous fiscal year, organisati­ons and individual­s revised upwards their returns after demonetisa­tion, which added to the revenue. At least 30,000 such cases, in which income for the previous years had been revised by either showing a significan­t jump in “cash in hand” or by filing a return for the first time after demonetisa­tion, are under scrutiny.

Besides, the two income declaratio­n schemes (IDS) last year added to the collection­s. At least ~15,000 crore came to the government from the IDS declaratio­ns as tax and penalty up to March last year.

“Although the third instalment of the Income Declaratio­n Scheme (50 per cent of tax and penalty) is due by September 30, a very small amount is expected. A large chunk of people paid the full amount last year only around demonetisa­tion, in cash or otherwise,” said a third official.

The absence of such a scheme in the second half will adversely impact tax growth this year. The income-tax department’s strategy for the fiscal year includes litigation management, disposing of high-value cases, scaling up searches and seizures, strengthen­ing systems and investigat­ion teams, and tying up with global data-mining companies for informatio­n gathering.

Indirect tax collection from the goods and services tax will be another challenge. From the Centre’s collection­s, it will need to pay a devolution of 42 per cent to states, in addition to a compensati­on, in case, states face any shortfall. The GST yielded a lower amount of ~90,669 crore in August, compared to ~94,063 crore collected in July.

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