Tax Evasion in India: Rs 1.4 lakh cr hunted
down in 3 years - CBDT
This first scheme expired on September 30, 2016r while
PMGKY came into effect in December 2016 and expired on March 31, 2017.
The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), the
policymaking body of the income tax department, on April 7, 2017 said that
various law enforcing agencies have unearthed tax evasion of Rs. 1.37 lakh
crore during the last three years as a result of over 23,000 searches and
surveys. This led to criminal prosecution in 2,814 cases and arrest of about
4,000 persons.
The CBDT’s performance appraisal report comes after the
expiration of government’s second scheme for income disclosure called Prime
Minister Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY).
Although the finance ministry is yet to announce the
amount declared under the scheme, an analysis of tax collection numbers done by
FE earlier this week showed that PMGKY may have garnered only a fraction of its
predecessor scheme, under which a declaration of Rs. 55,000 crore of
unaccounted money was made and close to Rs. 13,000 crore was collected as taxes
and penalties in 2016-17.
This first scheme expired on September 30, 2016 while
PMGKY came into effect in December 2016 and expired on March 31, 2017.
Explaining the actions taken over last three fiscals, the
CBDT said that the Enforcement Directorate intensified its
anti-money-laundering actions by registering 519 cases and conducting 396
searches culminating in arrests in 79 cases and attachment of properties worth
Rs. 14,933 crore.
Additionally, the government identified more than 245
benami transactions with provisional attachments of properties worth Rs.55
crore in 124 cases, the CBDT statement said. It added that the benami prohibition
law which remained inoperative for last 28 years was made operational through a
comprehensive amendment with effect from November 2016.
During 2013-14 to 2015-16, income tax investigations led
to the detection of more than 1,155 shell companies used as conduits by over
22,000 beneficiaries. The amount involved in non-genuine transactions of such
beneficiaries was more than Rs. 13,300 crore, the CBDT said in a statement. It
added that the ministry of corporate affairs issued more than 1 lakh notices for
striking off names of defunct and non-compliant companies.
“A high-powered group has been set up for coordinating
and monitoring the actions taken by departments concerned with the objective of
eliminating the conduits of black money generation and application,” the CBDT
said.
The board said that various steps have been taken to curb
cash transactions including penalising cash transaction of more than Rs. 2
lakh, limiting allowable cash expense up-to Rs. 10,000 only, making Aadhaar
mandatory for obtaining PAN and filing of income tax returns, and making PAN
mandatory for cash deposits above Rs. 50,000.
“The relentless crusade against black money will get
further intensified in the coming days making the tax evaders and money
launderers realise that they have to pay a heavy cost for their deviant
behaviour,” CBDT said.
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