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National
Exporters avail themselves of trade benefits by submitting fake certificates Unregistered service providers escaping tax net NEW DELHI: With units in special economic zones (SEZs) permitted to treat their domestic sales as export earnings, the government had to forgo revenue amounting to nearly Rs. 2,000 crore, the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India (CAG) has revealed. Making a case for an amendment to the SEZ Act, the CAG, in its report presented to Parliament on Tuesday, said: “SEZ units have been achieving the prescribed net foreign exchange earnings (NFE) mainly through domestic sales, defeating one of the sub-objectives of the scheme, which was to augment exports.” The government had to forgo Rs. 1,043 crore by way of customs duty exemptions alone to these units. A total duty of Rs. 106.71 crore along with an interest of Rs. 46.17 crore was recoverable from 24 SEZ units which failed to achieve positive NFEs. While the duty foregone on the SEZ scheme during the period from 2000-01 to 2005-06 was Rs. 8,842 crore, the duty foregone during 2006-07 would be Rs. 2,146 crore as per budget estimates. Turning to the disadvantage suffered by export oriented units compared to the SEZ units, the CAG said duty amounting to Rs. 681.38 crore was foregone on the inputs used in the manufacture of mobile phones which were cleared into the domestic tariff area (DTA) at nil duty in the SEZs. This could not be recovered as there was no provision to pay back the duty foregone on inputs utilised by producers of such goods when these were cleared at nil duty in the DTA. Referring to a specific case of duty thus foregone, the report said an audit scrutiny of Nokia India in the Madras SEZ showed that the unit cleared mobile phones worth Rs. 4,855.69 crore in 2005-06 and 2006-07 in the DTA at nil duty. And, in the absence of enabling provisions in the SEZ Act, the Rs. 681.38-crore duty foregone on inputs used in the manufacture of mobile handsets could not be recovered. Revenue lossAs for the target plus scheme, the report said exporters had availed themselves of higher trade benefits by submitting fake export certificates. This resulted in a revenue loss of Rs. 294.95 crore. In some other duty-free credit entitlement schemes such as the Vishesh Krishi Upaj Yojana also, exporters had availed themselves of about Rs. 350-crore credit wrongfully. Thus the total duty foregone under various export promotion schemes in 2006-07 was Rs. 66,368 crore, working out to 77 per cent of the total customs receipts during the fiscal year. Included in this was an unrealised customs duty revenue component of Rs. 2,555 crore at the end of 2006-07; of this Rs. 292 crore was an undisputable amount over 10 years. On revenue leakages in service tax, the CAG pointed out that a large number of unregistered service providers were escaping the tax net. The total additional revenue that could have been mopped up by the government as a result of audit intervention was Rs. 159 crore, the CAG said and asked the Finance Ministry to enhance scrutiny of service tax returns.
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