Poorer tax compliance adds to the government's revenue collection woes amid a broader slowdown in the economy.
Business
Standard : India’s slowing economy could easily be the fall
guy for Prime Minister Narendra Modi government’s struggles with
meeting tax targets. But there’s another culprit: tax
evasion.
A
nationwide consumption tax, introduced in 2017 and widely regarded as
a tool to improve tax compliance and boost economic growth, may have
failed to plug evasion, according to a report by the Comptroller and
Auditor General of India, the auditor of government accounts. The
number of Goods and Services Tax returns filed have declined, it
showed.
Poorer
tax compliance adds to the government’s revenue collection woes
amid a broader slowdown in the economy, where demand for everything
from cookies to cars has taken a knock. Consumption, which
contributes almost 60 per cent to India’s gross domestic product,
has been largely hurt by a shadow banking crisis, which in turn has
dragged growth down to a five-year low.
The
consumption tax was expected to bring in an anti-evasive tax regime,
but there are numerous cases of bogus billings, tax evasion and fake
invoicing, according to tax consultancy and auditing firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. “I wouldn’t expect this kind of
reform and tax regime to become stable quickly,” Pratik Jain, a
partner at PwC India, said.
The
government’s total tax revenue in the last financial year ended
March fell short of target by Rs 1.7 trillion ($24 billion),
according to provisional numbers. That’s due in part to GST
collection trailing monthly target for most of the year.
A
revenue miss again will put the fiscal deficit goal of 3.3 per cent
of GDP at risk, and limit the government’s ability to spend on
infrastructure and welfare programs.
The
finance ministry expected GST
to help boost GDP growth by as much as two percentage points. Despite
lowering of the GST rate to revive consumption, economic expansion
has slowed, coming in at 5.8 per cent for the quarter ended March.
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