Business Standard

Aviation, auto see worst tax outgo in Q1

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Sales across sectors have been hit by pandemicin­duced lockdown, but automobile and aviation have been the worst performers in terms of tax outgo. The aviation sector, particular­ly airlines, made no tax deposit in the first quarter.

Maruti Suzuki, Bajaj Auto, and Hero Motocorp’s tax collection­s were down 60-85 per cent. Even heavyweigh­t taxpayers Reliance Industries (RIL) and Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (ONGC) showed a dip of 36 per cent and 74 per cent, respective­ly, in April-june FY21.

Tax officials have attributed the dip to tax reforms, including changes in the corporate rate structure and higher refunds issued.

The numbers, compiled by the I-T Department, suggest Maruti Suzuki’s firstquart­er tax outgo stood at ~50 crore against ~318 crore in the same period a year ago, a dip of 84 per cent.

Hero Motocorp paid ~64 crore, down 72 per cent from ~228 crore.

Bajaj Auto’s is also down 28 per cent, and it paid ~180 crore.

Even top fastmoving consumer goods (FMCG) firms such as ITC and Hindustan

Unilever (HUL), which have seen decent economic activity and growth in sales, have deposited 20-40 per cent less tax than what they had in the same period last financial year.

ITC paid ~520 crore against ~750 crore, a dip of 30 per cent. HUL and

Procter & Gamble paid ~330 crore and ~22 crore, respective­ly, which is 13 per cent and 40 per cent lower than in the year-ago period.

Britannia, on the other hand, has been slightly better, and paid ~70 crore against ~73 crore earlier. Other mid-cap FMCG firms such as Godrej Consumer Products, Nestle, and Dabur have made lower payments this quarter.

Nestle is down 31 per cent at ~90 crore against ~130 crore earlier. For Dabur and Godrej Consumer Products, they are 24 per cent and 22 per cent, respective­ly.

“Only a few companies including pharmaceut­ical firms posted slight growth in tax payment against the same quarter last financial year,” said an official.

Experts did not buy the ratestruct­ure argument. “The reasons for the drastic fall in tax collection cannot be just changes in tax policy because very few companies opted for it. A possible reason could be slowdown, coupled with the pandemic impact, which would continue for two -three quarters,” said a tax expert.

Tax collection throws up a key question whether the department would meet the stiff target of ~13.19 trillion for FY21. As of June, gross direct tax collection was ~1.74 trillion, down 24.4 per cent from ~2.30 trillion in the same period of the previous year. This is due to dips in advance tax collection, which was down around 40 per cent in the first instalment­s.

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