Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Soon...

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Other potential red flags include the share capital of a company not being proportion­al to its revenue, the bank balance not matching the revenue it generates , and inflows of money being immediatel­y followed by outflows..

The government has been cracking down on shell companies as part of its larger effort to tackle black money, or income that is unaccounte­d for and hidden away from the tax department. In 2016, the government invalidate­d high-value banknotes and enforced a tougher law to deal with benami properties, or assets whose real beneficiar­ies purchase them in the name of someone else or a fictitious name.

A task force set up u in February 2017 has struck 226,000 companies off official records for not filing annual tax returns for a period of two years or more. The government recently said that it had identified another set of 225,000 companies that have not filed returns since 2015-16.

This task force was created after the demonetisa­tion drive of November 2016 to check the menace of shell companies and speed up action against them.

Once the criteria for identifyin­g shell companies are in place, “the rules will be fed to an automated system that is being developed,” a second official said.

“Once a suspects’ list is created, enforcemen­t officials will begin a probe,” the official said.

The government is also working to create a system that will enable seamless exchange of informatio­n between the ministry of corporate affairs,the tax department and the enforcemen­t directorat­e (ED) to identify and probe shell companies created solely for tax evasion and money laundering.

“Once the Registrar of Companies (ROC) identifies these dubious companies created to evade tax and launder money, the informatio­n will then be sent to the tax department or ED to conduct the probe and begin prosecutio­n,” said the first official cited above. .

While the ROC can scan the books of companies under section 206 of the Companies Act, 2013, it does not have the powers to probe tax evasion and money laundering, which are vested with the the tax department and ED, respective­ly. Over 1.7 million companies had been registered in India as of December 2017, according to available data.

Working on the project is the task force led by finance secretary Hasmukh Adhia.

“Defining shell companies is a much needed move to regularise the system. OECD (Organisati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t) is looking at identifyin­g harmful tax practices around the world and India’s definition of shell companies will definitely lead the way in checking...paper companies,” said Girish Vanvari, founder of Transactio­n Square, a tax advisory firm.

Last year, India signed a multilater­al agreement to prevent aggressive tax avoidance by MNCS. It was signed at a meeting of the OECD and seeks to deter the practice of making profits artificial­ly disappear from the market where economic activity takes place and move them to jurisdicti­ons with low or no tax.

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