GST Audits by the Indirect Tax body this Fiscal Year led to the Detection
of Rs 22,000 crs tax Evasion from nearly 48,000 cases
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Wrongful
input tax credit claim to be the major reason behind the leakage
The North Block has been
cheering the trend of India's monthly revenue collection from goods and
services tax hitting Rs 1.5 lakh crore and becoming a 'new normal'. Vivek
Johri, Chairman at Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs also exuded
confidence of breaching this level in the coming fiscal year starting from
April.
However, behind the
celebrations is a miscreant that is making India bleed billions of rupees from
its coffers. In a media interview, Johri said GST audits by the indirect tax
body this fiscal year led to the detection of Rs 22,000-crore tax evasion from
nearly 48,000 cases so far.
Johri cited wrongful input
tax credit claim to be the major reason behind the leakage. Possibly, some
taxpayers may have taken input tax credit on inputs for which credit is not
available as this is because of a wrong understanding of the law, Johri said.
Johri also said the tax body
has seen cases where the value of the goods is not properly declared, while
misclassification is another issue because of which the wrong rate of tax has
been applied.
India has stepped up efforts
to draw the salaried class to an exemption-less tax structure, but for indirect
tax experts believe this is about time when the officials plug the loopholes.
India for sure can’t afford the revenue losses when it seeks to bolster the tax
ecosystem and simplify norms to ramp up collections?
Several measures such as
reporting of outward supplies and matching of input tax credits have resulted
in identifying issues of fake invoicing, errant taxpayers who default on
payment of tax and fraudulent claim refund on exports, among others.
But,
experts believe that easing compliance burden is among the most important steps
the government has to take to plug the leakage. A complex registration process
is ailing the system and the tax authorities must also train on GST laws, they
said.
For multi-state entities,
compliances may be state wise but assessments, notices etc should be centralised.
This will be very beneficial to the entire industry where tax departments are
centralised and ensure proper compliance and collection of taxes, Mehta said.
The process of registration
has also become very cumbersome, adding that this is especially true when one
is operating from a rented premise or free of cost associate or group company
premises.
The authorities insist on
having affidavits notarised before the magistrate and have specific wordings on
the NOC. This process delays the registration. In many cases, businesses are
conducted without obtaining registration. The authorities should come out with
a pan-India standard checklist of documents instead of each and every
jurisdiction having a separate requirement list.
The government has
identified that a big source of leakage is business to consumer transactions
where the last mile invoice is not issued.
Some ideas being discussed
is rewarding consumers through a lottery system which will encourage seeking of
invoices from the local dealers. It would also be worthwhile to consider
whether any offsets can be given against the income tax liability of the
individuals which will encourage actively seeking the GST invoices from the
dealers.
Mehta also flagged the need
for proper GST law training. System generated notices are sent, but the
authorities are unable to justify the basis on which figures are derived. This
is creating unnecessary litigation and no recovery for the department.