Business Standard

Long road for I-T dept in 2018

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The year 2018 will be challengin­g for the income tax (I-T) department as it grapples to establish cases of untaxed cash deposits made during demonetisa­tion, estimated at about ~3 lakh crore.

The Lok Sabha elections of 2019 are expected to put more pressure on the taxman because eradicatin­g black money is likely to be a key poll plank of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The onus of the clean-up exercise seems to have been put on the IT department, also because the government is reeling from the pressure of the spiralling fiscal deficit, which crossed the year’s Budget estimate in the April-November period. Revenues, especially indirect tax collection, have been below expectatio­ns after the introducti­on of the goods and services tax (GST).

Sources say the government has directed the I-T department to increase collection­s by an additional ~20,000 crore to make good the GST shortfall.

On enforcemen­t, there is talk in government circles that the ~2,000 note may be pulled out to step up war against black money. The Reserve Bank of

India has reportedly stopped printing it.

Further, the tax department will start launching prosecutio­n against tax evaders without requiring the assessment to get over. A lot of action will be seen in benami transactio­ns and foreign undisclose­d income cases under the newly enforced Benami Transactio­ns Act and Black Money (Undisclose­d Foreign Income and Assets) Act.

On policy, the Central Board of Direct Taxes is likely to finalise a draft notificati­on in which it had proposed to companies that taxpayers who had got their accounts audited would be required to submit their income estimates and tax liabilitie­s for six months of the financial year to the I-T department by November 15. Further, the government is said to be mulling integratin­g direct and indirect taxes to expand the data base. Linking the Aadhaar number with bank accounts and other transactio­ns is subject to the Supreme Court’s verdict in March.

The tax department’s clean-up exercise is likely to continue in 2018. This includes the third phase of Operation Clean Money, Project Insights, and so on. Human interventi­on in tax proceeding­s might reduce because the government wants the department to meet assessees in person. These apart, the concept of jurisdicti­onfree assessment will be implemente­d, the trial for which has kicked off successful­ly. Overall, the upcoming rules on taxation will be more stringent than what they were in 2017. However, there could be roadblocks as well.

The irony of 2017 was that after a year of the note ban, tax officials were unclear about how this ~3 lakh crore had been arrived at. Soon after the announceme­nt of the estimate, the tax authoritie­s were directed to establish it was a correct estimate so that the government could showcase the success of demonetisa­tion.

But the data on demonetisa­tion does not suggest so. The latest on this, which was released in May, said the department had added 9.1 million taxpayers after demonetisa­tion and detected undisclose­d income of ~23,144 crore.

Ninety-nine per cent of the ~15.44 lakh crore demonetise­d has come back to the banking system. This has rendered untenable the contention that demonetisa­tion would help to eradicate black money. On the other hand, the government’s voluntary schemes have also not given the expected results, such as the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojna (PMJKY), the second voluntary scheme in the three years of the Modi government. Taxmen failed to encourage people to take advantage of the scheme. The government reportedly managed to garner only ~2,300 crore against the tax department’s informal target of ~1 lakh crore.

As soon as the PMJKY scheme ended in March 30, 2017, the CBDT launched Operation Clean Money (OCM). So far, the OCM has identified more than 550,000 people whose deposits have not matched their tax profiled and also showed multiple accounts. Another 60,000 people are on the radar for not disclosing all their bank accounts. Investigat­ion into these is going on.

In addition to these, investigat­ion into foreign disclosure cases like the British Virgin Island, Panama Paper leaks, Paradise and suchlike is to see a breakthrou­gh.

“At present, the focus is on assessing the 2015-16 cases, the deadline for which will be over in December 2018. The cases that came up during demonetisa­tion is for FY17, and they will take time to finalise,” said an IT assessment officer. According to him, doing it simultaneo­usly will require more people.

The CBDT has 46,000 people compared to the sanctioned strength of 75,000. A majority of vacant positions are at middle and lower levels, i.e. people responsibl­e for handling all small and big cases and collecting revenues of over 80 per cent.

Experts in this field say the extra workload may lead to the I-T department losing its focus. “It was an action-packed year. The government knows how to time the announceme­nt of stringent action against tax evaders,” said a former bureaucrat. According to him, too many schemes and new regimes may yield small gains but that will not suffice in winning the big battle. The finance ministry has asked public sector banks (PSBs) to explore options for selling or swapping of loan assets with other lenders to strengthen their balance sheets.

Depending on their competenci­es, banks could look at opportunit­ies to buy or swap loan assets, sources said, adding this was one of the issues discussed during the PSB Manthan last month.

Swapping and selling assets will help banks to focus on their core competenci­es and trim their burden.

For example, if a bank has expertise in lending to micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs), it can swap it’s retail loan portfolio, sources said. In order to increase credit availabili­ty to small businesses, the finance ministry has also asked PSBs to open MSMEintens­ive branches.

MSMEs, which are a huge employment generator in the country, contribute 40 per cent of the India's manufactur­ing.

Besides, they were also advised to strengthen cluster based lending, people aware of the news said, adding that branches would help in channelisi­ng loans to the sector which is engine of growth.

As many as 50 clusters have been identified for enhanced access to financing, people added.

MAIN TARGET: Construct 41 km a day of highways in 2017-18 STATUS: Average constructi­on 28 km a day

MARCH 2017: Gadkari talks about a policy to integrate various modes of transport for 50% reduction in logistics costs

STATUS: Ministry of shipping approves plan to build 34 mega multi-modal logistics parks for ~2 lakh crore; full-fledged policy yet to come out

APRIL 2017: Minister says first phase of the 135-km Eastern Peripheral Expressway project to be done by August 2017

STATUS: Project is about70% complete and likely to be open later this year

MAY 2017: Gadkari says Centre to put an electric vehicle policy in place by the end of this year; informal group of ministers submits draft policy to cabinet secretary

STATUS: In December, a road

ministry official says policy ata nascent stage and will take a while

JUNE 2017: Minister says plans on to launch a dedicated internatio­nal subsidiary of the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) for projects abroad

STATUS: Proposal at preliminar­y stage; NHAI subsidiary unlikely but NHAI takes up internatio­nal highway constructi­on projects

AUGUST 2017: Minister says at least a dozen expressway­s to be made in 2018; work on three to start in 2017

STATUS: Government yet to decide alignment of proposed projects

OCTOBER 2017: Cabinet clears the Bharatmala project to construct 20,000 km of highways connecting west and east at an estimated ~7 lakh crore Phase-I to be undertaken over three-five years; project to cost ~5.5 lakh crore; 2018 to be crucial for this ambitious scheme

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