Business Standard

JEWELLERS FIND A NOVEL WAY TO EVADE TAX

- RAJESH BHAYANI

Jewellers have found another way to bypass tax authoritie­s and launder smuggled gold, say people in the know.

With the Goods and Service Tax (GST) rate on gold rising to three per cent and a 10 per cent import duty, the attraction of its ‘ unofficial import’ of gold has risen in the past year. In 2017, according to GFMS Thomson Reuters data, 134.5 tonnes was imported clandestin­ely. This is on the rise in 2018, said a person who tracks gold closely.

Initially, after GST was implemente­d, when someone came to buy jewellery against his unaccounte­d money, this was sold for cash and the account book showed it as sale of new jewellery in exchange for scrapped old jewellery. An industry official said in such cases, the customer bill would account only for the making charge and GST on the former. Cash collected against the sale would be used to purchase unofficial­ly imported gold. Thus, the smuggled product (already used to make jewellery) comes on the jewellers' books, while the cash collected is used for paying for the unofficial purchase. Primarily conducted in jewellery costing less than ~200,000, where customer identity proof was not mandatory.

Now, according to another source, jewellers have found another way of adjusting unofficial­ly imported gold. He explain: “When a consumer comes with cash to buy jewellery, retail sale is made from unaccounte­d gold but instead of the

earlier method of showing it as sale of new against old-scrap, the jeweller shows it as purchase of jewellery against old gold.” There is no GST on such buying of old gold.

The transactio­n's size is kept below ~200,000; if needed, purchase and sale bills are made against another family member’s name.

Consumers here are taking a bigger

risk. Surendra Mehta, a chartered accountant and secretary of the Indian Bullion and Jewellers Associatio­n, said, “Retail customers will end up paying huge capital gains tax when the income tax authoritie­s link data with the GST portal for such sale.” He estimates 150 tonnes of unofficial gold was adjusted this way over a year.

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