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GST authorities bust a racket of fake invoicing of Rs 7896 crore

GST authorities bust a racket of fake invoicing of Rs 7896 crore

GST authorities in West Delhi busted a major racket of fake invoicing of Rs 7896 crore involving fraudulent Input Tax Credit (ITC) of Rs.1709 crore, using a network of 23 shell companies, the finance ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

The officers of Anti Evasion wing of Central Tax, Delhi West Commissionerate found that the network of fake companies procured and generated invoices without actual supply of goods and availed as well as passed on the ITC.

“The accused persons were evading tax by creating several dummy firms for the purpose of passing on ITC by generation of fake invoices,” the statement said.

“They also used banking transactions to make ITC appear genuine. These firms issued the fake invoices to buyers, who availed fraudulent input tax credit without actually receiving any goods and defrauded the exchequer by way of availing ineligible ITC towards GST liability,” it added.

Authorities have arrested two people who were caught in their hideout with several mobile phones, computers and incriminating documents. The accused been remanded to fourteen days judicial custody, and further investigation was going on.

Source: economic-times

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AI, data analytics to track GST evaders, boost compliance

AI, data analytics to track GST evaders, boost compliance

The government plans to increase the use of artificial intelligence and data analytics to track down tax evaders, and improve compliance with the Goods and Service Tax in order to augment revenue.

Top tax officials are scheduled to participate in a brainstorming session to be chaired by revenue secretary Ajay Bhushan Pandey next week to firm up this plan.

“The revenue secretary will hold a day-long meeting on January 7 with tax commissioners to discuss ways to streamline the GST system and plug leakages due to fraud,” said a person aware of the development.

The discussions will include assessing the wider use of data analytics and AI in the process of enforcement and red-flagging tax evaders and fake refund claimants without overreach or harassment to genuine taxpayers.

The meeting comes on the heels of the government notifying changes to GST rules to prevent frauds and fake invoicing, besides setting up grievance cells to ensure that genuine taxpayers are not harassed and the overall tax base increases. The government last week reduced input tax credit to 10% from 20% of eligible credit if invoices or debit notes were not reflected in filings.

Last month, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs instructed field officers to expeditiously create GST grievance redressal committees at zonal and state levels.

Tax officials have been directed to identify cases of suppression of personal income, wilful tax evasion, fake invoicing or inflated or fake e-way bills, and take stern action.

Those attending the session will include state tax commissioners and chief tax commissioners from the Centre, senior officials of various tax bodies along with officers of the enforcement wings. Their goal is to develop a targeted approach to stop tax and duty evasion while making sure that no taxpayer is troubled.

There’s growing concern over revenue shortfall, with slowing consumption demand adversely impacting GST collections. The corporate tax cut amounting to a loss of revenue of Rs 1.45 lakh crore, along with recent GST compensation of over Rs 35,000 crore to states, have increased the stress on the Centre’s fiscal position.

Source: Economic-Times.

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GST fraud unearthed; arrest made in fake invoices scam worth over Rs 100 crore

GST fraud unearthed; arrest made in fake invoices scam worth over Rs 100 crore

The Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI) has arrested two persons for being involved in fake invoices racket. The taxable value of these invoices were Rs 931 crore and they fraudulently availed the Input Tax Credit (ITC) amounting to Rs 127 crore through a complex web chain of various entities, said a statement by the Ministry of Finance. The two persons – Gulshan Dhingra, resident of Ramesh Nagar, New Delhi and Sanjay Dhingra, resident of Punjabi Bagh, New Delhi — were arrested by the Gurugram Zonal Unit of the DGGI. The accused are said to have formed separate entities in the name of their employees or dummy persons and generated fake invoices without actual movement of goods, namely ferrous/ non-ferrous scrap, ingots, nickel cathode, etc., thereby causing loss to exchequer by evasion of GST.

The statement also says that Gulshan Dhingra and Sanjay Dhingra availed this fraudulent ITC to offset their GST liability and also passed on such fraudulent ITC to further buyers who availed the same to discharge their GST liability against their outward supplies with a motive to defraud the Government exchequer. During the course of the investigation, their employees and dummy persons did not admit to knowing about the movement of the above mentioned goods.

The above crime has been classified as cognizable and non-bailable offences and after producing the accused before Judicial Magistrate in Gurugram Court on 07 October 2019, they have been sent them to judicial custody till 19 October 2019 for further investigation.

The incident has come to light only three days after a racket of generating fake GST invoices for fraudulently claiming the input tax credit on non-supplied goods was busted in Pune, where two persons were taken into custody. The alleged fraud was believed to be around Rs 700 crore. The two firms – M/s Reliable Multi trading and M/s Himalaya Tradelinks- had obtained GST registrations and together issued fake GST invoices of approximately Rs 700 crore with the GST component of Rs 54 crore to facilitate bogus input tax credit.

Source: Financial-Express

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The GST’s initial premise should be revisited

The GST’s initial premise should be revisited

When the GST was launched in July 1, 2017 with the promise to simplify our incredibly complex indirect tax system and unify the country through a single indirect tax, the nation supported the new disruptive tax regime the way it had supported demonetisation, setting aside the creeping doubts that were upsetting many businesses. The GST system was built on the simple premise of automatic matching of the invoices submitted by suppliers and buyers, enabling automatic processing of input tax credits (ITC) and refunds by the Infosys-built GST Network (GSTN) portal, the IT architecture that is the backbone of implementation. The GSTN was supposed to minimise frauds, curtail evasion, end harassment of taxpayers and corruption, and bring in transparency, leading to an increase in revenues, which would enable the government to lower rates and converge slabs, finally culminating in a single rate, one nation-one tax system, making it truly a “good and simple tax”.

Two years down the line, most of the promises, however, still remain only on paper. The GSTN has turned out to be miserably inadequate to fulfil its role due to the inefficiencies of the software. The automatic matching of invoices was junked only after a few months, when the returns for outward supplies (GSTR-1) and inward supplies (GSTR-2) could not be matched by the GSTN, and hence the refund of the ITC could not be processed, blocking scarce capital for millions of taxpayers. For easier transition to the new regime, a simple return — the GSTR 3B — was introduced only as a temporary measure while the GSTR-2 was suspended, so that the ITC refund could be made by using only the GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B.

The 3B return, however, has no validation whatsoever in the system, making it open to frauds and evasion that the automatic and complete matching between the GSTR-1 and GSTR-2 was supposed to have eliminated. In fact, the CAG, citing numerous instances of false ITC claims in his Report No, 11 of 2019 has said as much, emphasising that the rollback of invoice matching without any safeguards had rendered it prone to frauds. The self-correcting mechanism of complete invoice matching is a critical requirement of the system, in the absence of which the ITC is claimed by the taxpayer purely on a self-assessment basis without any system validation.

Curbing tax evasion

There have even been efforts to rationalise the incompetence of the system and institutionalise its inefficiencies. A former member of the Central Board of Indirect Taxes & Customs (CBIC) has argued that no country in the world has a complete invoice-matching system which is impractical. It is further asserted that major taxpayers such as public enterprises and private players like the Tata group, the Birla group, Mahindra & Mahindra, Hero, Infosys etc, who together pay 80 per cent of the GST, are not tax-evaders; hence, instead of wasting system resources on universal invoice matching, an intensive audit of their accounts equally serves the purpose.

Besides, it is claimed that in sectors like automobiles, steel or services, there is no scope for evasion since components and final products, or contracts and purchases, match perfectly. It is only in the sectors that sell products piecemeal, like soaps or toothpastes, that universal matching should be made mandatory; for all others, an intelligence-based checking, along with comprehensive auditing, should be far more effective than universal invoice matching. The alleged large-scale falsification of invoices has been dismissed as “absurdly illogical” and “only good English”.

Fake invoices

The arguments are as vicious as they are absurd. If universal invoice matching was impractical in the first place, why was the system designed upon this very premise? The argument that big players are all virtuous and small players are all evaders is dangerous to say the least — it is an inevitable step towards lobbying and patronage distribution, unfettered discretion, harassment and extortion — in fact, it is an insane prescription to institutionalise corruption and perpetuate very aberrations the GST regime was designed to thwart. There is also complete ignorance of the huge frauds and evasion resulting from fake invoices, which tax officials are struggling hard to curb.

In fact, the Minister of State for Finance has himself stated in Parliament that frauds amounting to ₹45,683 crore were unearthed since the launch of the GST. The CBIC Member (Investigation) had admitted that between April 2018 and February 2019, evasion of ₹20,000 crore was detected, of which ₹10,000 crore were recovered. A thriving ecosystem of fake companies using fake invoices has grown luxuriantly for claiming ITC; no sooner are the refunds claimed that these companies disappear into the thin air.

Only last week, ₹470 crore of evasion and fake invoices of ₹3,500 crore were uncovered by the tax authorities. There is something much more serious than “good English” at stake here, and the focus should be on addressing these serious structural deficiencies.

Source: The-Hindu-Business-Line

XaTTaX is Best GST Software, Simplify your Financial matters with GST eFiling Software for Return Filing & GST Billing Software in India.

  • Automate Invoicing and get Paid Faster
  • Integration with all popular accounting software
  • Manage your GST and E-WayBill Software anytime anywhere using multiple devices

Get Our GST Software DEMO and E-WAY BILL DEMO for FREE