Physical Address

304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Tax defaults in India rise by 1000% in last 10 years, litigations double: Report

Tax defaults in India have skyrocketed by 1000% in the last ten years and litigation associated with it has also consequently risen, according to a Moneycontrol report, which cited data compiled from various Union Budgets.
Also Read: Maruti Suzuki to introduce EVs in few months, awaits policies for clean tech like CNG, biogas, ethanol: R.C. Bhargava
Also Read: Infosys gets ₹3,898 crore partial GST tax relief for FY 2017-18 out of the ₹32,403 crore tax notice for 2017-22
Tax notices of ₹9.08 lakh crore are unpaid in the financial year 2022-23, compared to ₹80,003 crore in 2013-14. However, notices adding up to ₹4.23 lakh crore were sent just less than two years ago.
Notices totaling ₹2.13 lakh crore were sent between 2-5 years back, while nearly ₹1.43 lakh crore of taxes remain unpaid after 10 years.
Also Read: Nvidia’s new AI chip delay due to design flaws to affect Amazon, Google, and Microsoft: Report
Corporate taxes form a bulk of the defaults. Unpaid corporate taxes added up to ₹3.97 lakh crore and income other than corporate tax defaults, which includes capital gains tax and transfer pricing, was ₹4.81 lakh crore.
This can be attributed to multiple factors like the complexity and frequent changes in the law which creates confusions for businesses, and tax notices being sent to companies under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code(IBC), according to the report which cites legal experts.
Consequently tax-related litigation has also sharply increased, more than doubling to ₹12.21 lakh crore in 2022-23, compared to ₹5.03 lakh crore in 2013-14.
Corporate tax litigation accounted for ₹6 lakh crore and income other than corporate amounted to ₹4.5 lakh crore.
However, indirect taxes like GST accounted for only ₹2,317 crore, but is expected to rise next year due to the number of GST notices given to various companies according to the report.

en_USEnglish