To trace the source of money and detect possible tax evasion, the income tax department is investigating 60,000 high-value transactions that date back to 2004-05. |
These transactions are based on the Annual Information Reports (AIR) filed by entities like banks, mutual funds and companies. |
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Saying that the cases had been selected under a computer-aided scrutiny selection process, official sources told Business Standard that the investigations are likely to be complete by December 2007. |
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The 60,000 cases were selected from a pool of 18.7 lakh high-value financial transactions worth Rs 13,99,890 crore captured under AIR for 2004-05. Interestingly, the number of high-value transactions reported fell by 2.86 lakh in 2005-06, though their value shot up by Rs 9,25,631 crore to Rs 23,25,521 crore in that year. |
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The category of transactions tracked under AIR include cash deposits of Rs 10 lakh and above, credit card bills of Rs 2 lakh or more, mutual fund investments of Rs 2 lakh and above, investments of Rs 2 lakh or more in a company's bond issue, acquisition of a company's shares worth Rs 1 lakh or more, purchase of immovable property valued at above Rs 30 lakh, and investment of Rs 5 lakh and above in bonds issued by the Reserve Bank. |
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The AIR initiative was launched in 2004-05 to identify tax evaders. The information collected in 2004-05 was submitted for assessment in 2005-06 but is being scrutinised only in this financial year. |
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With tax rates slowly being reduced, the focus of the government machinery is now on improving tax compliance to broaden the tax base and sustain revenue growth. |
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