Following a review by the Prime Minister's Office, a task force with members from regulatory ministries and enforcement agencies has been constituted to monitor action against "deviant" shell companies.
While the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) has filed cases against 49 shell companies, as much as Rs 3,900 crore have been laundered by 559 persons with the help of 54 professionals. Also, Rs 1,238 crore cash has been deposited in shell or dormant companies, post demonetisation.
A task force, headed by revenue and corporate affairs secretaries, with members from various regulatory ministries and enforcement agencies has been set up to monitor the actions taken against such deviant shell firms by various agencies.
"Harsh punitive actions will be taken against the deviant shell companies which will include freezing of bank accounts, striking off the names of dormant companies, invocation of Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Amendment Act, 2016," it said.
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It was decided at the meeting that appropriate "red flag" indicators will be used for identifying shell companies, and a database of such companies and their directors will be built by pulling in information from various agencies.
The database will also capture Aadhaar numbers of individual directors in the companies, the statement said.
Shell companies are characterised by nominal paid-up capital, high reserves and surplus on account of receipt of high share premium, investment in unlisted companies, no dividend income and high cash in hand.
Companies', which do not conduct any operations, so as to prevent their misuse for money laundering and tax evasion, especially in the context of unearthing blackmoney post demonetisation, it said.
This is among a series of steps being taken by the income tax department to plug loopholes in the law and deter people from wrongly availing of capital gains benefit.
With bogus capital gains of Rs 80,000 crore availed by shell companies last year coming to the notice of the I-T department, the Budget 2017-18 has proposed 10 per cent long-term capital gains tax on those who acquired shares in unlisted companies after October 1, 2004, if they had not paid securities transaction tax (STT) at the time of purchase.
The long awaited Place of Effective Management (POEM) rules, to be effective the current fiscal (April 2016), will not apply to companies with a turnover or gross receipts of Rs 50 crore or less in a financial year.
The rules require foreign companies in India and Indian firms with overseas subsidiaries to pay local taxes based on where the business is effectively controlled.
The statement issued today said a small sample analysis of domestic shell companies has found that Rs 1,238 crore cash have been deposited in these entities in November-December. SFIO has launched criminal prosecution against them for cheating the government after investigation of entry operators running a group of 49 shell companies and other proprietorship concerns.
The tax department has reopened completed assessment in these cases and ED has initiated action under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002. ICAI has also initiated disciplinary proceedings against its members. Winding up process has been initiated in respect of 49 shell companies, it said.