The Central Board of Excise & Customs (CBEC), too, has reported non-recoverable taxes in 15,500 cases — to the tune of Rs 4,796 crore. The board has said these cases are fit for a write-off.
Expressing concern over failure in recovery of revenue dues, Parliament’s standing committee on finance has asked the government to find out how such huge dues in these cases became unrecoverable.
There are 3,519 cases of central excise duty evasion, involving Rs 2,812 crore, which cannot be recovered. In Customs, the number of cases where recovery is not possible is even higher —7,058, involving Rs 1,450 crore. Besides, service tax dues to the tune of Rs 506 crore cannot be recovered in 4,923 cases.
Further, CBDT has found that the arrear demand in 2012-13 increased to Rs 4,82,027 crore from Rs 3,33,079 crore and Rs 2,48,927 crore in the previous two years. The rise in indirect tax arrears was even steeper. Those from excise, Customs and service tax rose to Rs 1,03,975 crore in 2012-13 from Rs 33,791 crore the previous year. Service tax arrears saw a 10-fold increase.
Number of cases | Amount involved (in Rs crore) | |
CBDT | ||
No assets for recovery | 379 | 1,94,073 |
Assessees not traceable | 102 | 3,657,33 |
CBEC | ||
Central Excise | 3,519 | 2,812.48 |
Customs | 7,058 | 1,450.88 |
Service Tax | 4,923 | 506.12 |
Total | 15,500 | 4,769.57 |
Source: Standing Committee on Finance |
The rely has, however, not impressed the committee, which has now recommended “urgent, time-bound and concrete action.”