Not disclosed some income in ITR? You may soon get a tax notice

 








Recently, many individuals and companies, who may have hidden some income from the tax department, have come under the taxman’s lens following an elaborate investigation based on application of data analytics and machine learning and robust data sharing between various tax authorities.

According to a report in the Economic Times, the government has used statistics of the last two financial years to create the audit checklist. Tax departments have used big data analytics in the last few years. The tool is deployed to find outliers in any industry, and the gap from industry based average taxes is used to determine targets for further scrutiny.

The indirect tax department has issued notices to several individuals and companies in July after it found discrepancies in their income tax and indirect tax filings, the financial daily mentioned.

Worth mentioning here is that in the past, the direct tax and the indirect tax departments operated independently and would not share data. However, the government’s big data push in the last couple of years has meant both departments have been sharing data with each other. This has also led to deeper analysis and more tax notices and scrutiny, the publication mentioned citing industry trackers.

This year, however, notices have also been issued to some lawyers— who are outside the gamut of indirect tax.

The tax notices specifically mentioned if the recipient falls under any exempted category (such as lawyers), then they should just supply some additional information regarding their exemption and not pay taxes.

“The tax authorities have been relying on artificial intelligence and data to gather information about tax leakages. While this is certainly good to track tax evasion, unnecessary notices must be avoided to enhance ease of doing business” the business daily quoted as saying Abhishek A Rastogi, partner, Khaitan & Co, a law firm.

Earlier too, data mining by the tax department had shown that some companies may be under invoicing or selling their goods in cash to their customers.

As various government departments start sharing data, the income tax department has also started going after benami properties or real estate properties bought under fake names. In what seems to be a trigger following a data analytics-based investigation, the tax department has started issuing notices to owners of benami real estate properties, ET first reported on March 11.

Insiders said that the notices are also a result of a data mining exercise conducted by the tax department. Earlier various government departments wouldn’t even talk to each other, now they are made to share data, people in the know said.




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