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Panel to redraft Income Tax Act to focus on removing ambiguities, unlikely to suggest rate changes
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Panel to redraft Income Tax Act to focus on removing ambiguities, unlikely to suggest rate changes

Press Trust of India • January 14, 2019, 17:57:02 IST
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The task force set up to redraft Income Tax law will focus on removing the ambiguities, rather than suggesting dramatic policy changes and tweaking of tax rates, the panel’s convenor Akhilesh Ranjan said on Tuesday

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Panel to redraft Income Tax Act to focus on removing ambiguities, unlikely to suggest rate changes

New Delhi: The task force set up to redraft Income Tax law will focus on removing the ambiguities, rather than suggesting dramatic policy changes and tweaking of tax rates, the panel’s convenor Akhilesh Ranjan said on Tuesday. Ranjan said the 6-member task force formed to redraft the over 50-year old I-T law will meet shortly to draft a new law which will be more comprehensible. “Tax rate is prima-facie, not the main focus area of this task force…. (task force will focus on) simplification which can remove the ambiguities,” Ranjan told reporters here. He said there are clauses, provisos and explanations which have been added to the I-T Act, 1961 overtime which need to be streamlined in simple language. [caption id=“attachment_4347785” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]Representational image. Reuters. Representational image. Reuters.[/caption] “We have been adding provisions after provisions, explanations after explanations, they have become inconsistent, ambiguous. So let us clarify the real intent of the law. In that process, there may be some new policy initiatives while trying to make things clear. “The focus is not on coming out with a new tax policy but the focus is on making the law more comprehensible,” said Ranjan, who is member legislation in the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT). The task force was set up by the finance ministry in November last. Arbind Modi was made the convenor of the panel and he retired on 30 September. On 26 November, Ranjan was appointed as the new convenor, who has been mandated to submit the report by 28 February, 2019. Asked if the panel would submit any report before the interim budget on 1 February, Ranjan said it is unlikely. The NDA government would be presenting its interim Budget for 2019-20 on 1 February. The full Budget would be presented after the general elections due sometime in the mid of 2019. In September last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, had said in an event that the Income-tax Act, 1961 needs to be redrafted. Other members of the task force include Girish Ahuja (chartered accountant), Rajiv Memani (Chairman and Regional Managing Partner of EY), Mukesh Patel (practicing tax advocate), Mansi Kedia (Consultant, ICRIER) and G C Srivastava (retired IRS and advocate). “I am having a meeting (of the task force) very shortly. I’m sure that they have done a lot of work and I would like to know what is the work that has been done till now and we will take it forward,” Ranjan said. The panel was tasked to draft direct tax laws in line with the laws prevalent in other countries, incorporating international best practices, and keeping in mind the economic needs of the country. Former finance minister P Chidambaram had in 2009 proposed a direct taxes code (DTC) to replace the cumbersome IT law to embody the principle of keeping taxes low and removing exemptions. The NDA government, since coming to power in 2014, has already implemented general anti-avoidance rules GAAR. In 2016, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley also promised to lower corporate tax rate to 25 percent in 5 years. Currently, income up to Rs 2.5 lakh per annum is exempt from tax for individuals.

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