However, the time taken for tax payments is relatively less in India, which is rated ahead of China and Japan where it takes 318 hours and 330 hours, respectively, to comply with tax regulations, according to a World Bank and PwC report.
According to the report, the total tax rate in India can be as high as 62.8 per cent, there are as many as 33 payments under the head of profit, labour and other taxes, and the time taken to comply with taxation requirements could be as much as 243 hours.
In the Asia Pacific region, in the past year, the Maldives and Sri Lanka have introduced online platforms for filing and paying labour contributions, easing the administrative burden of complying with labour regulations, the report noted.
Over the past nine years, China registered the largest drop in the number of tax heads, with a fall of 28 payments, followed by India and Malaysia, which each reduced payments by 22.
The most common reason for the reduction in the number of payments is the introduction and improvement of electronic filing systems along with their adoption by taxpayers, the report said.
Paying Taxes 2014 investigates and compares tax regimes across 189 economies worldwide, ranking them according to the relative ease of paying taxes.
The period covered by the study was 2004 to 2012.