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Income tax in India is governed by Entry 82 of the Union List of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India, empowering the central government to tax non-agricultural income; agricultural income is defined in Section 10(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961.[2] Income-tax law consists of the 1961 act, Income Tax Rules 1962, Notifications and Circulars issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), annual Finance Acts, and judicial pronouncements by the Supreme and high courts.
The government taxes certain income of individuals, Hindu Undivided Families (HUF's), companies, firms, LLPs, associations, bodies, local authorities and any other juridical person. Personal tax depends on residential status. The CBDT administers the Income Tax Department, which is part of the Ministry of Finance's Department of Revenue. Income tax is a key source of government funding.
The Income Tax Department is the central government's largest revenue generator; total tax revenue increased from ₹1,392.26 billion (US$17 billion) in 1997–98 to ₹5,889.09 billion (US$71 billion) in 2007–08.[3][4] In 2018–19, direct tax collections reported by the CBDT were about ₹11.17 lakh crore (₹11.17 trillion).[5]
Taxation has been a function of sovereign states since ancient times. The earliest archaeological evidence of taxation in India is found in Ashoka's pillar inscription at Lumbini. According to the inscription, tax relief was given to the people of Lumbini (who paid one-eighth of their income, instead of one-sixth).[6]
In the Manusmriti, Manu says that the king has the sovereign power to levy and collect tax according to Shastra:[7]
लोके च करादिग्रहणो शास्त्रनिष्ठः स्यात् । — Manu, Sloka 128, Manusmriti[7] ("It is in accordance with Sastra to collect taxes from citizens.")
The Baudhayana sutras note that the king received one-sixth of the income from his subjects, in return for protection.[7] According to Kautilya's Arthashastra (a treatise on economics, the art of governance and foreign policy), artha is not only wealth; a government's power depended on the strength of its treasury: "From the treasury comes the power of the government, and the earth, whose ornament is the treasury, is acquired by means of the treasury and army." Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha, eulogizing King Dilipa, says: "it was only for the good of his subjects that he collected taxes from them just as the sun draws moisture from the earth to give it back a thousand time."[8]
British rule in India became established during the 19th century. After the Mutiny of 1857, the British government faced an acute financial crisis. To fill the treasury, the first Income-tax Act was introduced in February 1860 by Sir James Wilson (British India's first finance minister).[8] The act received the assent of the Viceroy on 24 July 1860, and came into effect immediately. It was divided into 21 parts, with 259 sections. Income was classified in four schedules: i) income from landed property; ii) income from professions and trade; iii) income from securities, annuities and dividends, and iv) income from salaries and pensions. Agricultural income was taxable.[8]
A number of laws were enacted to streamline the income-tax laws; the Super-Rich Tax and a new Income-tax Act were passed in 1918. The Act of 1922 significantly changed the Act of 1918 by shifting income-tax administration from the provincial to the central government. Another notable feature of the act was that the rules would be outlined by annual Finance Acts instead of the act itself.[9] A new Income-tax Act was passed in 1939.
The 1922 act was amended twenty-nine times between 1939 and 1956. A tax on capital gains was imposed in 1946, and the concept of capital gains has been amended a number of times.[9] In 1956, Nicholas Kaldor was appointed to investigate the Indian tax system in light of the Second Five-Year Plan's revenue requirement. He submitted an extensive report for a coordinated tax system, and several taxation acts were enacted: the wealth-tax Act 1957, the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957, and the Gift Tax Act, 1958.[9]
The Direct Taxes Administration Enquiry Committee, under the chairmanship of Mahavir Tyagi, submitted its report on 30 November 1959 and its recommendations took shape in the Income-tax Act, 1961. The act, which became effective on 1 April 1962, replaced the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. Current income-tax law is governed by the 1961 act, which has 298 sections and four schedules.[9]
The Direct Taxes Code Bill was sponsored in Parliament on 30 August 2010 by the finance minister to replace the Income Tax Act, 1961 and the Wealth Tax Act.[10] The bill could not pass, however, and lapsed after revocation of the Wealth Tax Act in 2015.
In its income declaration scheme, 2016, the government of India allowed taxpayers to declare previously-undisclosed income and pay a one-time 45-percent tax. Declarations totaled 64,275, netting ₹652.5 billion (US$7.8 billion).[11]
The New Tax Regime was announced for individuals & HUF in Budget 2020 and became effective from financial year 2020-21. According to it, individuals can opt for reduced tax rates with no option for claiming exemptions & deductions. Currently, Indian taxpayers can choose between the old tax regime and the new tax regime.[12]
At the time of introduction, it had 7 different slabs. After three years from introduction, Indian Government reduced both the slab count & tax rates under New Tax Regime in Budget 2023, after reports of poor adoption to new tax regime by tax payers[13]
For the assessment year 2016–17, individuals earning up to ₹2.5 lakh (US$3,000) were exempt from income tax.[14] About one percent of the population, the upper class, falls under the 30-percent slab. It increased by an average of 22 percent from 2000 to 2010, encompassing 580,000 income-tax payers. The middle class, who fall under the 10- and 20-percent slabs, grew by an average of seven percent annually to 2.78 million income-tax payers.[15]
According to section 10(1) of the Act, agricultural income is tax-exempt. Section 2(1A) defines agricultural income as:
Income in the activities below is initially computed as business income, after permissible deductions. Thereafter, 40, 35 or 25 percent of the income is treated as business income and the rest is treated as agricultural income.
Income | Business income | Agricultural income |
---|---|---|
Growing and manufacturing tea in India | 40% | 60% |
Sale of latex, latex-based crepe or brown crepe manufactured from field latex or coalgum obtained from rubber plants grown by a seller in India | 35% | 65% |
Sale of coffee grown and cured by an Indian seller | 25% | 75% |
Sale of coffee grown, cured, roasted and ground by an Indian seller | 40% | 60% |
These are permissible deductions according to the Finance Act, 2015:
The due date for a return is:
Individuals with an income of less than ₹500,000 (less than ₹10,000 of which is from interest) who have not changed jobs are exempt from income tax.[17] Although individual and HUF taxpayers must file their income-tax returns online, digital signatures are not required.[17]
The practice of paying taxes in advance rather than in a single sum at the end of the fiscal year is known as advance tax. These taxes, often known as the 'pay-as-you-earn' scheme, is paid on tax bills above ₹10,000 in installments instead of as a lump sum. The schedule of advance tax payment for individual and corporate taxpayers are:
There was no change in the timeline for tax payment; however, if the deposit of Advance Tax is delayed, a reduced interest rate of 9 percent per annum, or 0.75 percent per month,[18] will be applicable instead of the current rate of 12 percent per annum, or 1 percent, for payment of all taxes falling between 20 March 2020 and 30 June 2020.
Income tax is also paid by tax deduction at source (TDS):
Section | Payment | TDS threshold | TDS |
---|---|---|---|
192 | Salary | Exemption limit | As specified in Part III of I Schedule |
193 | Interest on securities | Subject to provisions | 10% |
194A | Other interest | Banks – ₹10,000 (under age 60); ₹ 50,000 (over 60). All other interest – ₹5,000 | 10% |
194B | Lottery winnings | ₹10,000 | 30% |
194BB | Horse-racing winnings | ₹10,000 | 30% |
194C | Payment to resident contractors | ₹30,000 (single contract); ₹100,000 (multiple contracts) | 2% (companies); 1% otherwise |
194D | Insurance commission | ₹15,000 | 5% (individual), 10% (domestic companies) |
194DA | Life-insurance payment | ₹100,000 | 1% |
194E | Payment to non-resident sportsmen or sports association | Not applicable | 20% |
194EE | Payment of deposit under National Savings Scheme | ₹2,500 | 10% |
194F | Repurchase of unit by Mutual Fund or Unit Trust of India | Not applicable | 20% |
194G | Commission on sale of lottery tickets | ₹15,000 | 5% |
194H | Brokerage commission | ₹15,000 | 2% |
194-I | Rents | ₹180,000 | 2% (plant, machinery, equipment), 10% (land, building, furniture) |
194IA | Purchase of immovable property | ₹5,000,000 | 1% |
194IB | Rent by individual or HUF not liable to tax audit | ₹50,000 | 5% |
194J | Professional or technical services, royalties | ₹30,000 | 10% |
194LA | Compensation on acquisition of certain immovable property | ₹250,000 | 10% |
194LB | Interest paid by Infrastructure Development Fund under section 10(47) to non-resident or foreign company | – | 5% |
194LC | Interest paid by Indian company or business trust on money borrowed in foreign currency under a loan agreement or long-term bonds | – | 5% |
195 | Interest or other amounts paid to non-residents or a foreign company (except under §115O) | As computed by assessing officer on application under §195(2) or 195(3) | Avoiding double taxation |
The tax rate is 25 percent for domestic companies. For new companies incorporated after 1 October 2019 and beginning production before 31 March 2023, the tax rate is 15 percent. Both rates apply only if a company claims no exemptions or concessions.
For foreign companies, the tax rate is 40 percent (50 percent on royalties and technical services). Surcharges and cesses, including a four-percent health-and-education cess, are levied on the flat rate.[19] Electronic filing is mandatory.[20]
Non-corporate taxpayers pay a 10-percent surcharge on income between ₹ 5 million and ₹ 10 million. There is a 15-percent surcharge on income over ₹ 10 million. Domestic companies pay seven percent on taxable income between ₹ 10 million and ₹ 100 million, and 12 percent on income over ₹ 100 million. Foreign companies pay two percent on income between ₹ 10 million and ₹ 100 million, and five percent on income over ₹ 100 million.
There are four types of income-tax returns:
Those responsible for registering or maintaining accounting books or other documents with a record of any specified financial transaction[21] must file an annual information return (Form No. 61A). Producers of a cinematographic film during the financial year must file a statement (Form No. 52A) within 30 days of the end of the financial year or within 30 days of the end of production, whichever is earlier. Non-residents with a liaison office in India must deliver Form No. 49A to the assessing officer within sixty days of the end of the financial year.
In the Finance Act, 2021, the government has introduced the following changes on the Income Tax Act, 1961:
Self-assessment is done on a taxpayer's return. The department assesses tax under section 143(3) (scrutiny), 144 (best judgement), 147 (income escaping assessment) and 153A (search and seizure). Notices for such assessments are issued under sections 143(2), 148 and 153A, respectively. Time limits are prescribed in section 153.[22]
Penalties can be levied under §271(1)(c)[23] for concealing or misrepresenting income. Penalties may range from 100 to 300 percent of the tax evaded. Under-reporting or misreporting income is penalized under §270A. Penalties are 50 percent of the tax on under-reported income and 200 percent of the tax on misreported income. Late fees are payable under §234F.
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