Millennium Post (Kolkata)

CBIC issues standard operating procedure for scrutiny of GST returns for FY20 onwards

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NEW DELHI: The CBIC has come out with a standard operating procedure (SoP) for scrutiny of GST returns for fiscal 2019-20 onwards under which the analytics unit will identify returns for scrutiny depending on various risk parameters.

As per the SoP, the selection of returns for scrutiny will be done by the Directorat­e General of Analytics and Risk Management (DGARM) based on various risk parameters identified by them.

DGARM will select the GSTINs registered with the Central Tax authoritie­s, and the details of the GSTINs selected will be made available on the scrutiny dashboard of the concerned Central Tax officer on the ACES-GST applicatio­n.

“The details of the risk parameters, in respect of which risk has been identified for a particular GSTIN, and the amount of tax/ discrepanc­y involved in respect of the concerned risk parameters (i.e. likely revenue implicatio­n), will also be shown on the scrutiny dashboard of the proper officer for their convenienc­e,” the SoP said.

Earlier this month, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) had rolled out a module for automated scrutiny of GST returns.

The module enables tax officers to carry out scrutiny of GST returns of Centre administer­ed taxpayers selected on the basis of data analytics and risks identified by the System.

The standard operating procedure further said that as the data made available on the dashboard has been generated at a particular point in time for the calculatio­n of risk parameters, this data may undergo a change at the time of scrutiny of returns, due to subsequent compliance­s carried out by the taxpayer or by the suppliers of the taxpayer.

The concerned tax officer shall, therefore, rely upon the latest available data, it added.

The concerned Central Tax officer would have to conduct scrutiny of returns pertaining to a minimum of 4 GSTINs every month, which would include scrutiny of all returns pertaining to a financial year for which the said GSTIN has been selected for scrutiny.

“As far as possible, scrutiny of return should have a minimal interface between the proper officer and the registered person and, there should normally not be any need for seeking documents/ records from the registered persons before issuance of Form GST ASMT-10,” it added.

GST ASMT-10 is a scrutiny notice that a tax officer would send to an assessee.

On receipt of such notice in GST ASMT-10 on the common portal, the registered person may accept the discrepanc­y mentioned in the said notice, and pay the tax, interest and any other amount arising from such discrepanc­y and inform the same or may furnish an explanatio­n for the discrepanc­y in Form GST ASMT-11, through the common portal, to the proper officer within the specified time period of 30 days, the standard operating procedure added.

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