The Asian Age

Changes that may affect your pocket

Premium, SBI charges, tax fines to go up

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

April 1 is set to bring in both sweet and sour developmen­ts for citizens. And this is not an April fool's story. The sour bits, first. Starting April 1, you will have to shell out more for higher premiums on all non-life insurance policies providing health, auto, and accident coverage. You will be paying more because insurance regulator IRDAI has decided to let insurers revise commission­s for insurance agents.

Also, from tomorrow, a junior assessing officer with the income-tax department can take a call on conducting a 'survey' or a 'search' at your premises. His senior, one level up, can provisiona­lly attach the property without waiting for a court order. And now, income-tax officers will be able reopen tax cases from 10 years ago if search operations reveal undisclose­d income and assets of over `50 lakh.

If you are dealing in large amounts of cash, it would be better to switch over to digital payments. The Central government's ban on paying any amount in excess of `2 lakh in cash is coming into play from April 1. You also should no take filing of income-tax returns easy anymore as any form of delay will attract a penalty – anywhere between `1,000 and `10,000.

And from April, the SBI will start charging its customers more for various services or situations — including nonmainten­ance of minimum balance and cash deposits and withdrawal­s beyond a specified number of transactio­ns per month. The bank has also increased the minimum average balance requiremen­t. A savings account in a metro needs to maintain a balance of `5,000, urban areas `3,000, semi-urban `2,000 and `1,000 in rural areas. Any shortfall in average balances will attract a penalty between `50 and `100.

Enquiries relating to old records beyond 12 months per item will attract a charge of `200 while `100 would be charged for ATM card or ‘Welcome Kits’ returned by courier due to wrong address.

The hike in service charges is also likely to dampen the cheer of SBI associate bank customer, who are celebratin­g access to the suite of products that their bank's merger with SBI on April 1 could bring in. One among those banks, which will be merged with the SBI on Saturday, is the State Bank of Hyderabad, which served the role of central bank during the Nizam’s rule and which was taken over by the government as an SBI associate bank after Hyderabad's accession to India in 1948. The Good The list of positive developmen­ts is quite small. April 1 will bring in the reduction in income-tax rate. Personal income tax has been slashed to five per cent from 10 per cent on income of `2.5 lakh to `5 lakh.

In a relief, there will now be no scrutiny of assessees filing I-T returns for the first time. Individual­s having taxable income up to `5 lakh can now just fill up a simple one-page form for filing their tax returns.

Meanwhile, air travellers can expect to breeze through airports because the CISF has decided to scrap the stamping and tagging of hand baggage at seven airports — Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Kochi and Ahmedabad.

Speaking of a breeze, the country can also expect better quality air thanks to the Supreme Court’s ban on the sale of all vehicles that are not compatible with the BS-IV emission norms.

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