Jakarta Globe, Unni Krishnan & Vrishti Beniwal, Mar 04, 2015
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| India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (Reuters Photo/Stringer) |
Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has a simple message for tax evaders: Come clean
now and avoid jail.
Under a law
proposed last week, offenders will have a window to declare income illegally
stashed in overseas accounts and pay penalties before investigations start,
Revenue Secretary Shaktikanta Das said in an interview on Tuesday. After that,
they face as much as 10 years in jail and fines of as much as 300 percent of
the amount originally owed to the government.
“There will
be no amnesty, but the government will give a one-time compliance,” Das said in
his New Delhi office. The violator “has to pay the tax and penalty and interest
and other charges, but we won’t criminally prosecute.”
Modi’s
campaign to recover so-called “black money” helps fulfill a campaign pledge
amid signs his popularity is slipping as his government seeks to narrow the
widest budget deficit among the largest emerging markets. Some estimates put
the figure at as much as $2 trillion over the past five decades, almost equal
to India’s gross domestic product.
Indians
illegally stashed the most money abroad in 2011 after China and Russia,
according to a report by Global Financial Integrity.
Wealthy
individuals and private companies are the “primary drivers of illicit flows,”
Washington-based GFI, which researches cross-border money transfers, said in a
2010 report.
Still,
India has no reliable estimate of how much money is out there, and next year’s
fiscal budget doesn’t rely on any inflows from the measures.
“I don’t
see a dramatic river of money coming in,” said R. Kavita Rao, professor at New
Delhi-based National Institute of Public Finance and Policy and author of a
2011 report commissioned by the government to study the black-market economy.
“Just the
law by itself isn’t strong enough unless offenders feel there’s a flow of
information and they will be caught. Frankly, that’s not the case.”
Black money
India will
work with other nations to hunt black money, Modi told lawmakers on Tuesday,
joining the U.S. and U.K. in targeting tax evasion.
His
Bharatiya Janata Party lost state elections in the capital Delhi last month to
an upstart anti- graft party that used the issue to win votes in a nation where
two thirds of the population live on less than $2 a day.
India’s
treasury brought in about 101 billion rupees ($1.6 billion) from an amnesty
program in 1997, when more than 470,000 Indians declared 330 billion rupees of
income. Under the program, they were safe from prosecution and penalties.
Come clean
“It’s my
faith that, given a chance, the people of India come clean,” then Finance
Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said at the time. In 2007, the Supreme Court
ruled that Indians cannot claim absolute amnesty following criticisms that such
programs penalize honest tax payers.
Modi’s
first full-year budget featured a fiscal deficit target of 3.9 percent of GDP
for the year starting April 1, higher than a previous goal of 3.6 percent. The
extra funds will be spent on roads, ports and power plants to boost growth in
Asia’s third-largest economy, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said.
The
projection of a 16 percent increase in tax collections hinges on boosting growth,
Das said. India’s tax-to-GDP ratio was 10.7 percent in 2012, higher than only
11 of about 200 countries tracked by the World Bank.
“All
revenue numbers are linked to growth,” Das said. Slower economic expansion and
“some totally unforeseen global or domestic developments” are key risks to the
government’s forecasts, he said.
Bloomberg

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