INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Mumbai: In an apparent volte-face, the Central Board of Direct Taxes has said that figures of 'write-offs' of Income Tax arrears furnished
under right to information (RTI) action were sent out in error
Responding to a media report With Rs
Principal Chief Commissioner of Income Tax (Pr-CCIT) Hyderabad had provided erroneous figures of 'write-offs' under an RTI application filed
by Chandra Shekhar Gaur, a Neemuch (Madhya Pradesh) activist.According to the RTI replies, the Pr-CCIT, Hyderabad had stated that it had
written off a total of Rs 3002.20 crores in two financial years, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.The CBDT spokesperson, Saurabh Ahluwali,
Commissioner of Income Tax (Media Technical Policy) now says that the information provided was "due to an inadvertent error made by the
CPIO who reported the figures of 'Cash Collection' or recoveries made from arrears in these years as the figures of arrears written off."The
correct amount of arrears written off in those two years for the Andhra Pradesh Telangana by the Pr-CCIT Hyderabad, was actually zero
(Nil), as no write-off orders were passed in these (two) years, he said, adding that the RTI applicant Gaur has been informed of the
mistake.Interestingly, the IANS had sent an email to the CBDT on May 16, with specific queries on the figures and the authorisation levels
for the 'write-offs', which was ignored for nearly 13 days.After the IANS story was published on May 28, the CBDT swung into action with a
reply.On the figures of tax arrears, totaling to over Rs 50,000 crore, including over Rs 33,157.97 crore from Pune alone, provided under RTI
by various IT offices across India, the CBDT spokesperson said it had already collected Rs 44,633 crore during 2017-2018, which was 14.6
percent higher than Rs 38,944 crore collected in the previous fiscal.Besides, the CBDT said of the current demands, Rs 52,537 crores was
recovered by the ITD in 2017-2018.The CBDT reiterated that 'write-off' of arrears was a detailed and long-drawn process and only initiated
for arrears which become irrecoverable "after all avenues for recovery are exhausted."Besides, all proposals of 'write-off' of arrears above
Rs 5,000 are examined by a committee at Zonal, Regional and Local levels, while any proposals for 'write-off' above Rs 25 lakh must "be
approved by CBDT" and any such amount above Rs 50 lakh need approval "by the Finance Minister."For small value arrears upto Rs 10,000, there
are relaxations in guidelines under a fast-track process, but the rigorous process remains in place and during 2017-2018 (upto December 31,
2017), a meager amount "of Rs 5.6 crore was written off in the entire country, the spokesperson said said.(This story has not been edited by
TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)