Income Tax India: Statistics

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[[Category:India |I ]]
 
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources |I ]]
 
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=Collection of tax, arrears=
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==2011: 2.77% Indians pay I Tax==
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''' Only 2.77% Indians pay income tax '''
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The Times of India, Sep 1, 2011
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Just 2.77% of India’s 1.21 billion people pay personal income tax, official data has revealed. “The number of effective tax payers as on March 31, 2011 was 3,35,79,831 (33.57 million),” minister of state for finance S S
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Palanimanickam said in a reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday.
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This is just 2.77 % of over 121 crore or 1.21 billion population of the country.
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The amount of direct tax collection rose to Rs 446,070 crore in 2010-11 from Rs 378,063 crore the previous year, the minister said. IANS
  
 
=2015: 17 people owe Rs 2.14 lakh crore arrears=
 
=2015: 17 people owe Rs 2.14 lakh crore arrears=
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These details have been disclosed in written replies to the Rajya Sabha by minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha, who also said that a large proportion of the large-size outstanding tax arrears may not be collectible due to various reasons. Sinha said action for recovery is being taken.
 
These details have been disclosed in written replies to the Rajya Sabha by minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha, who also said that a large proportion of the large-size outstanding tax arrears may not be collectible due to various reasons. Sinha said action for recovery is being taken.
 
=Tax relief on education loans to study abroad=
 
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Tax-relief-valid-on-edu-loans-to-study-02122015001062 ''The Times of India''], Dec 02 2015
 
 
Lubna Kably
 

 
 
'''Tax relief valid on edu loans to study abroad'''
 
 
In good news for parents whose children study overseas or plan to do so, the Pune income-tax appellate tribunal has held that higher education abroad is no bar for claiming tax relief on educational loans.
 
A deduction for interest paid on such loans will be allowed from the taxable income of a parent, who has taken the loan and is paying interest, even if the child is studying overseas.
 
 
However, such a loan must be taken from either financial institutions, banks or from government-approved charitable institutions. Though Section 80E of the I-T Act states a parent is eligible for claiming tax relief on such loans, it has often been a ground for dispute during tax assessment. The term `higher education' has been defined in Section 80E of the I-T Act as: “Any course of study pursued after passing the senior secondary examination (SSE) or its equivalent from any school, board or university recognised by the central government, state government, local authority or any recognised authority .“
 
 
“This section does not specify that higher education must be undertaken by the student in India or that the overseas course must be approved by authorities in India. The only requirement is that such higher education should be undertaken by the student after passing SSE or its equivalent from a recognised institution in India,“ says Parizad Sirwalla, tax partner, KPMG.
 
 
Even in this case of Nitin Shantilal Muthiyan, which came for hearing before the Pune tribunal, the tax officer had held that deduction under Section 80E is allowable only in cases of higher education pursued in India. He, thus, disallowed the claim of interest of Rs 73,125 made by the taxpayer whose son, who had completed his BE in Electronics from Pune University, was pursuing a course at George Washington University , US. At the first stage of appeal, the commissioner of I-T (appeals) also upheld the action of the tax officer.
 
 
The taxpayer then filed an appeal with the income-tax appellate tribunal (ITAT) and obtained a favourable order. The ITAT in its order observed: “Provisions of Section 80E do not contain any stipulation that the higher education should be pursued only in India. If the intent of the legislation was that education should be pursued in India, in order to avail of the interest deduction, it would have stated so. Further, the taxpayer's son had completed SSE or its equivalent, as is required by this section, before pursuing studies overseas.“ Thus, the ITAT allowed the interest deduction claim made by the father during financial year 2008-09.
 
 
“The ITAT's decision is welcome, particularly in light of the spiralling cost of overseas education, and more and more Indian students opting for higher studies overseas. In terms of applicability of the decision, an ITAT's decision is binding within its jurisdiction, but carries precedent value in similar disputes for other jurisdictions, which are outside its purview,“ adds Sirwalla.
 
 
=TDS: Online rectification in ITR simplified, 2015=
 
[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/tech-news/I-T-Dept-simplifies-online-rectification-of-TDS-in-ITR/articleshow/50123897.cms ''The Times of India''], Dec 10, 2015
 
 
'''I-T Dept simplifies online rectification of TDS in ITR'''
 
 
''The finance ministry said a new facility has been provided for pre-filling of TDS schedule''
 
 
 
Aimed at making life easier for tax payers, the I-T department today said it has simplified the process of online rectification of incorrect details of tax deducted at source (TDS) filed in the income tax return (ITR).
 
Earlier, taxpayers were required to fill in complete details of the entire TDS schedule while applying for rectification on the e-filing portal of the I-T Department.
 
 
To avoid this, the finance ministry said a new facility has been provided for pre-filling of TDS schedule while submitting online rectification request on the e-filing portal to facilitate easy correction or updating of TDS details.
 
"This is expected to considerably ease the burden of compliance on the taxpayers seeking rectification due to TDS mismatch," an official statement said.
 
Errors due to incomplete TDS details in rectification applications were leading to delays in processing of such applications, thereby causing hardships to taxpayers, it added.
 

Revision as of 17:43, 23 July 2016

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Collection of tax, arrears

2011: 2.77% Indians pay I Tax

Only 2.77% Indians pay income tax

The Times of India, Sep 1, 2011

Just 2.77% of India’s 1.21 billion people pay personal income tax, official data has revealed. “The number of effective tax payers as on March 31, 2011 was 3,35,79,831 (33.57 million),” minister of state for finance S S Palanimanickam said in a reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday.

This is just 2.77 % of over 121 crore or 1.21 billion population of the country. The amount of direct tax collection rose to Rs 446,070 crore in 2010-11 from Rs 378,063 crore the previous year, the minister said. IANS

2015: 17 people owe Rs 2.14 lakh crore arrears

The Times of India, Aug 01 2015

Just 17 people owe massive Rs 2.14 lakh cr in tax arrears

Just 17 individuals have a whopping Rs 2.14 lakh crore as outstanding tax arrears, with each of them owing more than Rs 1,000 crore. This is more than double the amount of total tax dues worth Rs 90,568 crore outstanding against 35 companies in this category (with outstanding tax arrears of over Rs 1,000 crore each), the Parliament has been informed.

Together, these individuals and companies account for more than one-third of the overall direct tax arrears (including the demand not fallen due), which stood at Rs 8,27,680 crore as on April 1, 2015.

At the same time, the number of taxpayers owing over Rs 10 crore to the government rose by about 69% to 4,692 in three years to March, 2015.

These details have been disclosed in written replies to the Rajya Sabha by minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha, who also said that a large proportion of the large-size outstanding tax arrears may not be collectible due to various reasons. Sinha said action for recovery is being taken.

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