1 / 27

Income Tax

Income Tax. Savita Sawant -8249 Ravi Nagrani -8366. Indian Income Tax. Governed by CBDT. Part of Dept. of Revenue managed by IRS, under ministry of finance , Govt. of India. Levy of tax is governed by Income Tax Act, 1961.

xerxes
Télécharger la présentation

Income Tax

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Income Tax Savita Sawant -8249 Ravi Nagrani -8366

  2. Indian Income Tax • Governed by CBDT. • Part of Dept. of Revenue managed by IRS, under ministry of finance , Govt. of India. • Levy of tax is governed by Income Tax Act, 1961.

  3. Income tax is a tax payable, at the rate enacted by the Union Budget (Finance Act) for every Assessment Year, on the Total Income earned in the Previous Year by every Person.

  4. Some Key Definitions-Income Tax Law • Assessment year refers to the 1st day of April every year. Income earned during the previous year is charged to tax in the assessment year. • Previous year refers to the financial year immediately preceding the Assessment year.

  5. The principle of taxation of income is: - • All revenue incomes are chargeable to tax unless it is specifically exempt (declared as not taxable). • All capital profits are not chargeable to tax unless specifically made chargeable.

  6. Progressive:Tax imposed so that the effective tax rate increases as the economic well being increases. • Regressive:The effective tax rate decreases as the economic well being increases. • Proportional:The tax rate is fixed as the economic well being increases.

  7. Residential Status • Resident & Ordinarily Resident. • Resident but not Ordinarily Resident. • Non Residents.

  8. Heads Of Income The total income of a person is divided into five heads, viz., • Income from Salary. • Income from House Property . • Income from profits and gains of Business or Profession . • Income from Capital Gains . • Income from Other sources .

  9. General Gross Components The total income of a person is divided into five heads, viz., • Basic. • HRA. • Conveyance. • Children Education Allowance. • Allowance in any other name.

  10. Basic : Taxable • HRA : Taxable. Exemption can be claimed • Required Document – Rent receipt • Computation of exemption - Least of the following : 1) Actual amount of HRA received 2) 50% (Metro) / 40% (Non Metro) of Salary (Basic + DA) • Actual Rent paid Less 10% of Salary ( Basic + DA) [The exemption will not be available, if the employee lives in his own house, or in a house for which he does not pay any rent or pays rent which does not exceed 10% of annual basic salary]

  11. Conveyance : Taxable. Exempted up to Rs.800 per month & up to Rs.1600 per month if the employee is Handicapped. • Children Education Allowance :Taxable. Exempted up to Rs.100 per month per child restricted to 2 children • Other Allowances :All other allowances (except LTA) are Taxable

  12. In arriving at the taxable income certain deductions are allowed being; 1.Deduction for HRA. 2.Deduction for Conveyance allowance up to Rs. 9,600/- per annum. 3.Deduction for Leave Travel Allowance. 4.Deduction for Medical Reimbursement up to Rs. 15,000/- per annum. 5.Deduction for Housing loan interest paid upto Rs. 1,50,000/- per annum. 6.Deduction for eligible investments U/S 80C & 80CCD of the Income Tax Act –not exceeding Rs.1,00,000

  13. Eg:Mrs.X (age 51 yrs) is a part time college lecturer in Delhi owned by A Ltd. During the year 2008-09 she gets basic salary of Rs.52,300 upto june 30,2008 and Rs.62,700 afterwards. Besides, she gets 30 % of basic salary as house rent allowance ,Rs.1,6300 per month as dearness allowance (71 % of it forms a part of salary for computation of retirement benefits) and Rs. 5000 per month as conveyance allowance which is entirely used for personal purposes. On July 10,2008, the employer transfers a music system to Mrs. X on her completing 10 years of service (cost of music system purchased on September 1,2007 :Rs.22,470) for Rs.7,500.She is member of the statutory provident fund to which both the employer and employee contribute @12% of basic salary. Apart from the minimum contribution, she makes an additional contribution of Rs. 6000 per month to the provident fund. During the previous year 2008-09, Rs.65,698 is paid to her for checking answer sheets of different universities. Determine the taxable income and tax liability of Mrs.X for the assessment year 2009-10 on the assumption that she pays rent of Rs.14,000 per month.

  14. Rates of Tax and Deductions Educational Cess is payable on tax calculated above at 3%.

  15. How to Save Tax (or) Claim Exemption • Investments under Sec 80C • Mediclaim Insurance Policy – Sec 80D • Personal Disability under Sec 80U • Dependent Disability ie. Handicapped dependent under Sec 80DD • Interest on Educational Loan under Sec 80E • Donations under Sec 80G ALL THE ABOVE INVESTMENTS / EXEMPTIONS ARE CLASSIFIED AS DEDUCTION UNDER CHAPTER VI-A

  16. Objectives of the Direct Tax Code • Improve efficiency and equity of the system. • Introducing moderate levels of taxation. • Expanding the tax-base.

  17. Strategies Adopted • Minimise Exemption • Remove ambiguity in law • Check erosion of tax base

  18. The Goal • Consolidate and amend all direct taxes. • Simplify language to ensure that the law can be reflected in the return form. • Reduce scope for litigation. • Flexibility in accommodating changes without need for frequent amendments. • Eliminate regulatory functions. • Provide Stability.

  19. Key Gains • Deductions increased (sec 80C –Rs 3 lakh from 1 lakh). • Highest tax rate of 30% kicks in only if taxable income in a year exceeds Rs 25 lakhs. • Net Wealth tax rate exemption limit increased (Rs. 50 crore from Rs.30crore) • STT abolished. • Max penalty down to 2 times tax amount. • Base date for Capital gains tax shifted to April 1-2000

  20. Key Pains • The low-income category will be hit by the proposal as it abolishes the exemption on HRA benefits and home loan interest for self occupied property. • Deduction for rent paid restricted to Rs.2,000 per month. • Rent free accommodation to govt. employees made taxable • No distinction between short term and long term assets. • Perks to be included in salary income and taxed. • EET method of taxation for savings introduced.

  21. Key pains ….contd. • Investments in equity-linked saving schemes of Mutual Funds (ELSS) will no longer be an investment avenue.. • HRA, Medical and leave travel allowance are proposed to be clubbed with the gross salary

  22. Tax Incentives on Saving Schemes

  23. Comparison –Low Income HRA Received : Rs 9,000 Rent: Rs.10,000

  24. Comparision –Medium Income HRA Received : Rs 20,000 Rent : Rs.18,000

  25. Comparision –High Income HRA Received : Rs 50,000 Rent: Rs.36,000

  26. THANK YOU

More Related