Business Standard

ADVANCE TAX MOP-UP JUMPS 52% IN Q2

Current mop-up 14.6% higher than the 2019-20 level of ~2.21 trillion

- DILASHA SETH

Advance tax collection during the Q2 of the fiscal year grew over 50 per cent over the equivalent period in 2020-21, providing the government with additional spending power to fuel economic recovery after the disruption caused by the second wave. The advance tax mop-up between July 1 and September 22 stood at ~1.72 trillion, a growth rate of 52.2 per cent over the ~1.13 trillion in the same period last year.

Advance tax collection during the second quarter of the fiscal year grew over 50 per cent over the equivalent period in 2020-21, providing the government with additional spending power to fuel economic recovery after the disruption caused by the second Covid-19 wave earlier this year.

The advance tax mop-up in the second quarter between July 1 and September 22 stood at ~1.72 trillion, a growth rate of 52.2 per cent over the ~1.13 trillion in the same period last year, the preliminar­y data released on Friday by the Central Board of Direct Taxes showed.

Advance tax in the April-september period stood at ~2.53 trillion, a 56 per cent growth rate over the ~1.62 trillion in the correspond­ing period last year.

Of the advance tax in the first half of the fiscal year, corporatio­n tax accounted for ~1.96 trillion and personal income tax ~56,389 crore.

“This amount is expected to increase as further informatio­n is awaited from banks,” the Ministry of Finance said in a statement.

Collection in the current fiscal year so far is 14.62 per cent higher than the 2019-20 levels of ~2.21 trillion.

Advance tax is paid as and when the money is earned in four instalment­s rather at the end of the fiscal year. It is considered an indication of economic sentiment. The first instalment, or 15 per cent of advance tax, is to be paid by June 15, the second by September 15 (30 per cent), the third by December 15 (30 per cent), and the rest by March 15.

Direct tax collection net of refunds grew by 74.4 per cent up to September 22 to ~5.7 trillion compared to ~3.27 trillion in the same period last year. Corporatio­n tax stood at ~3.02 trillion, net of refunds, and personal income tax including security transactio­n tax stood at ~2.67 trillion.

Gross collection at ~6.45 trillion is 47 per cent higher than last year. This includes corporatio­n tax of ~3.58 trillion and personal income tax, including securities transactio­n tax, of ~2.86 trillion.

Aditi Nayar, chief economist, ICRA Ratings, said the robust growth was an enthusing signal of the waning impact of the pandemic on Indian macros.

“The sharp jump in direct tax collection has benefited from the formalisat­ion of the Indian economy, which was already underway, but has been accelerate­d by the pandemic. The formal/tax-paying portion of the nonagricul­tural economy has gained market share at the cost of the balance, benefiting from the structural shifts generated by demonetisa­tion, goods and services tax, as well as the Covid shock,” she said.

This suggests the upturn will sustain in the second half as well, even though a normalisin­g base may dampen the pace of growth, she added.

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