The Asian Age

TCS could have computeris­ed I- T in 1977

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New Delhi, Dec. 9: India missed a golden opportunit­y to implement a fully computeris­ed tax administra­tion system way back in the late ‘ 70s as a proposal by TCS was rejected by the then finance minister Charan Singh, claims a new book.

Management strategist­researcher Shashank Shah has come out with the book titled “The Tata Group: From Torchbeare­rs to Trailblaze­rs”, coinciding with the completion of 150 years of The Tata Group and the death anniversar­y of JRD Tata on November 29.

According to the author, after nationalis­ation of banks by the Indira Gandhi government in 1969, there was declining business with banks as the Centre did not want computers in India.

“It believed that computeris­ation would lead to mass unemployme­nt. It is contextual to mention a fact that few know,” he claims.

Mr Shah says that it was TCS ( Tata Consultanc­y Services) that had developed the now ubiquitous permanent account number ( PAN) system for the income tax department in 1977. “Impressed by the output, the company was given an assignment to computeris­e the total processing of income tax. However, Charan Singh, then finance minister, decreed that there would be no computeris­ation in the finance ministry as it could create unemployme­nt!” he writes in the book, published by Penguin Random House India.

“If implemente­d then, India would have been far ahead of several countries through a fully computeris­ed tax administra­tion system,” Mr Shah claims.

It is mandatory to quote PAN on return of income, all correspond­ence with any income tax authority.

From January 1, 2005, it has become mandatory to quote PAN on challans for any payments due to the IT Department.

The book is replete with other little- known facts about The Tata Group.

Among these is about Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and Mahatma Gandhi helping in maintainin­g industrial harmony at Tata Steel plants in the 1920s.

Between 1920 and 1924, Tata Steel, which then had the largest industrial force any single Indian firm had in those years, witnessed three strikes, the book says. “At such a tumultuous time, Mahatma Gandhi arrived in Jamshedpur to mediate. Along with eminent freedom fighter Deshbandhu Chittaranj­an Das and CF Andrews, he tried to rekindle the relationsh­ip between the management and the workers,” it says.

Bose sided with the workers and battled for their rights by negotiatin­g a settlement.

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