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Black money riddle: India has more car buyers than tax payers

has just 24.4 lakh tax payers who declared an annual income of over Rs 10 lakh, yet 25 lakh new cars, including 35,000 luxury cars, are being bought every year

India TV Business Desk New Delhi Published on: December 27, 2016 18:14 IST
Cars on Indian roads
Black money riddle: India has more car buyers than tax payers

In an indication of how India is facing a parallel economy being run through black money, it has been revealed that the country has just 24.4 lakh tax payers who declared an annual income of over Rs 10 lakh, yet 25 lakh new cars, including 35,000 luxury cars, are being bought every year for last five years. 

According to a top ranking government official, out of more than 125 crore Indians, only 3.65 crore individuals filed their tax returns in the assessment year 2014-15.

"Of the 3.65 crore individuals (filing returns in assessment year 2014-15), there were only 5.5 lakh people who paid income tax of more than Rs 5 lakh and accounted for 57 per cent of the total tax kitty. This essentially means that only 1.5 per cent of those filing tax returns (3.65 crore) are contributing to 57 per cent of tax kitty," the official said.

The tax returns when compared with car sales throw astonishing numbers, he said.

"Car sales on an average in last five years has been about 25 lakh per year. In the last three years the car sales were 25.03 lakh, 26 lakh and 27 lakh," he said adding the statistics points to a large number of people having income to buy cars are outside the tax bracket.

A car normally has a life of seven years and a second car is purchased not before five years by a common man, the official said.

The income tax data collated shows only 48,417 persons reporting income of more than Rs 1 crore in a year. Yet luxury brands like BMW, Jaguar, Audi, Mercedes, Porsche and Maserati sell almost 35,000 cars every year.

Of the individuals filing returns, 5.32 lakh were with income of less than Rs 2 lakh per annum, and so not within the tax bracket.

He said 24.4 lakh filers declared their annual income of being more than Rs 10 lakh and there were 1.47 lakh tax fillers who had an income of over Rs 50 lakhs in a year.

Also during the 2014-15 Assessment Year, there were 1.61 crore people whose tax deducted at source (TDS) were deducted but they did not file income tax return (ITR), he said.

India's tax revenue as a percentage of its GDP was 16.7 per cent in 2016, compared with 25.4 per cent in the United States and 30.3 per cent in Japan.

The official said the numbers point to a significant number of people who are liable to pay taxes aren't doing so.

The government, he said, is shoring up its efforts to check tax evasion.

The November 8 decision to junk old 500 and 1000-rupee notes are one of the steps to tackle the menace, he said adding that mandating people to deposit the old currency in banks was a way to account for the unaccounted money and tax them.

(With PTI inputs)

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