Cape Times

India launches tax amnesty scheme to unearth unaccounte­d cash

- Rajesh Kumar Singh

INDIAN Finance Minister Arun Jaitley yesterday unveiled a scheme to give tax dodgers another chance to come clean, as he sought to bring billions of dollars worth of undeclared income into the mainstream economy.

The move follows Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to scrap 500-rupee and 1 000-rupee banknotes in a bid to flush out cash earned through illegal activities, or earned legally but never disclosed.

Under the proposed scheme, a person making the declaratio­n would have to pay 50 percent in taxes and surcharges. The individual would also have to park a quarter of the total sum in a non-interest bearing deposit for four years.

While Jaitley expects the scheme to discourage tax evaders from laundering their ill-gotten wealth, experts said there was no better alternativ­e to sweeping tax reforms.

“Since it offers clarity on how unaccounte­d cash will be taxed, it can help in cleaning up the cash economy,” said Vishal Malhotra, a tax partner at Ernst & Young. “But you must follow it up with a drastic reduction in tax rates to improve compliance.”

Deposits In the first week after India’s so-called “demonetisa­tion” drive, banks received $74.2 billion (R1.04 trillion) in fresh deposits.

Analysts at HSBC expect the deposits to swell by $164bn by end-December.

The surge in deposits, particular­ly in previously empty accounts, has alarmed tax authoritie­s who fear poor account holders are being lured into laundering money on behalf of big-time tax evaders.

The new scheme comes barely a month after a similar drive managed to unearth $9.5bn in undeclared income and assets. But with cash estimated to make up just 6 percent of illicit wealth, the disclosure­s might not be of the same proportion.

Last year, an amnesty aimed at unearthing foreign assets fell short as fewer than 700 people availed of it, paying about $364 million in taxes.

Modi’s administra­tion has billed the “demonetisa­tion” drive a “surgical strike” on black money, which has sucked out 86 percent of cash in circulatio­n and pushed Asia’s third-largest economy to the brink of a liquidity crisis.

Opposition parties led by Congress have stalled parliament, demanding a reply from Modi and compensati­on for the families of dozens of people reported to have died while queuing at banks to swop old money for new.

On Monday last week, they took to the streets protesting against Modi’s decision to cancel 500-rupee and 1,000-rupee banknotes as legal tender. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A man holds placards and shouts slogans during a rally by India’s main opposition Congress Party against the government’s decision to withdraw 500 and 1000 Indian rupee banknotes from circulatio­n, in Mumbai, yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS A man holds placards and shouts slogans during a rally by India’s main opposition Congress Party against the government’s decision to withdraw 500 and 1000 Indian rupee banknotes from circulatio­n, in Mumbai, yesterday.

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