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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, August 13, 2001 |
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Call for transparency in Central Excise Dept.
By Our Special Correspondent
CHENNAI, AUG. 12. The former Union Finance Minister, Mr. P.
Chidambaram, called for an early end to treatment of the Customs
department as a source of revenue.
As long as India remained a net importer of capital goods,
intermediate products and raw materials, high rates of import
duty would affect the competitiveness of Indian industry,
inasmuch as the duty, in economic terms, was a ``tax on
exports'', Mr. Chidambaram said.
Speaking at a seminar on ``What ails the revenue administration
in India'', organised by the Madras Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (MCCI), Mr. Chidambaram said continuing with high rates
of customs duty (up to 40 per cent, compared to an average of 5
to 10 per cent in developed countries) after the abolition of
quantitative restrictions on imports and multiplicity of duty
rates were an ``invitation to the Customs staff to take bribe and
a temptation to importers to pay bribe''.
The trend the world-over was for the Customs department to play
the role mainly of vigilance over supply of items like drugs and
guns, he said.
The Customs department should also facilitate larger imports and
exports of tradable goods. However, the high level of export
incentives in India encouraged fraud in the name of exports.
Calling for a differentiated approach to dealing with problems of
the three revenue departments, namely, customs, excise and
income-tax, the former Finance Minister said the first task of
the Central Excise department should be to enforce transparency.
It was a poor reflection on the integrity of the manufacturing
sector that out of a total of 1.2 lakh excise assessees, just a
handful were prepared to accept clearance of goods and assessment
of duty online.
The scheme of online assessment was meant to avoid visits of
excise staff to the premises of manufacturers and introduce
transparency, but the assessee community was not interested in
transparency, he said.
The tax authorities, on their part, should avoid the tendency to
go on appeal in each and every case for fear of vigilance or
parliamentary inquiry, even where the merits of the case clearly
went against revenue, Mr. Chidambaram said.
Referring to income-tax, he said the narrow base of tax payers
showed widespread evasion and this led to the burden of higher
rates falling on honest assessees.
Though it was wrong on the part of the Income-tax Department to
have brought back the system of scrutiny of returns, the fact
remained that large sections of the affluent population paid no
income-tax at all or paid only nominal tax.
Mr. M. R. Sivaraman, former Revenue Secretary to the Union
government, said exemption from excise duty for the small-scale
sector up to a turnover of Rs. 1 crore (which encouraged
splitting up of installed capacity), widespread misuse of Modvat
credit, failure of exporters to fulfil their export obligation
arising from duty-free import of inputs and leaving 50 per cent
of services untaxed were responsible for the lack of expected
buoyancy in revenue in the wake of reduction of rates and slabs.
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