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The number of taxpaying entities earning Rs 500 crore or more, which contribute about a quarter of India’s tax collections, has jumped.
Eighty-eight companies paid Rs 1.36 lakh crore in taxes in the year ended March 2015, according to the report released by the taxman. That’s 20 percent more than what 64 such entities – including one individual – paid in the previous year.
The more than 37 percent increase in the number of such taxpayers is impressive though the base is small, said Rajesh Gandhi, partner at Deloitte India.
While the Income Tax Department releases the data more than two years after a financial year ends, it’s an indicator of India’s taxpayers’ profile. The government has since taken a series of measures to widen the base, particularly last year when Prime Minister Narendra Modi outlawed 86 percent of currency in circulation to crack down on unaccounted wealth. A crackdown on dormant firms and high-value cash transactions followed.
The tax base widened in the financial year 2014-15. The number of returns filed jumped 11.5 percent to about 4.35 crore. As a result, total collections from all taxpayers rose 23 percent year-on-year to Rs 5.49 lakh crore, according to the report. The mop-up from individuals fell marginally while companies paid 43 percent more tax.
The number of Indians who earned Rs 10 lakh or more, the highest tax threshold for the category, jumped 14.2 percent during the year to 2.5 lakh taxpayers. However, the total tax paid by them fell 10.5 percent to Rs 77,934 crore during the year.
Overall, individuals filed 4.07 crore, or about 93 percent of the total returns.
(This article was originally published on BloombergQuint)
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