The
Union Cabinet on Thursday night is believed to have discussed amending laws to
levy close to 60 per cent income tax on unaccounted deposits in banks above a
threshold post demonetisation of high-denomination currency notes.
The
move comes amid banks reporting over Rs. 21,000 crore being deposited in
zero-balance Jan Dhan accounts in two weeks after the Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000
notes were banned, which authorities apprehend may be the laundered black
money.
There
was no official briefing on what transpired in the meeting that was called at
short notice as Parliament is in session. Traditionally, there could no
disclosures outside on any policy decision taken during the sitting of
Parliament.
Sources
said the government was keen to tax all unaccounted money deposited in bank
accounts after it allowed the banned currency to be deposited in bank accounts
during a 50-day window from November 10 to December 30.
There
have been various statements on behalf of the government ever since the
demonetisation scheme was announced on November 8, which has led to fears of
the taxman coming down heavily on suspicious deposits that could be made to
launder black money.
Officials
have even talked of a 30 per cent tax plus a 200 per cent penalty on top of a
possible prosecution in cases where black money holders took advantage of the
50-day window for depositing the banned currency.
Sources
said the government plans to bring an amendment to the Income Tax Act during
the current winter session of Parliament to levy a tax that will be higher than
45 per cent tax and penalty charged on black money disclosed in the one-time
Income Disclosure Scheme that ended on September 30.
As
for those black money holders who did not utilise the window, they would be
charged a higher rate which could be close to 60 per cent that the foreign
black money holder had paid in 2015.
Sources
said the government is keen to root out benami deposits, particularly in Jan
Dhan accounts.
There
was also talk of the government imposing a limit on domestic gold holding, but
it is not clear if the proposal was discussed at the Cabinet meeting chaired by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday night.
The
Cabinet meeting, summoned at a very short notice, comes amid reports of high
tax penalty terrifying people from putting their cash savings in the formal
banking system.
The
sources said the government wants all of the Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000 banknotes to
be deposited and not burnt or destroyed for the fear of penal action.
The
Income Tax Department had previously warned that cash deposits above Rs. 2.5
lakh threshold post demonetisation decision could attract tax plus a 200 per
cent penalty in case of income mismatch.
It
was stated that the department was tracking all cash deposited during the
period of November 10 to December 30, 2016, above a threshold of Rs. 2.5 lakh
in every account.
This
had instilled fear in people with reports of the banned currency even being
destroyed.
The
sources added that the government may come out with a deposit scheme or an
instrument like bond where the cash savings in the banned notes could be
deposited.
A
50-day window was given to holders of the old currency to deposit in their bank
accounts. But the penal tax provisions were deterring many.
Source
: http://www.thehindu.com/
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