FBR initiates drive to ensure tax return filing by vehicle owners
The sources said tax officials are obtaining data
of registered motor vehicles above 1,000cc to determine the sources of
income of their owners to increase filings of tax returns.
They
told The News that Inland Revenue asked local car assemblers and customs
authorities to share the last five-year data of purchased vehicles with
the tax department.
“We are comparing this with the data provided by the provincial motor vehicle registration authorities,” said a source.
The
sources said the FBR has started issuing notices to the owners of
vehicles and around 422 vehicles have been seized on non-compliance.
Motor
vehicle registration authorities of various cities have so far shared
data of 821,000 registered vehicles above 1,000 CC, while Indus Motors
Co Limited, Pak Suzuki Motors Co Ltd and Honda Atlas Motors Ltd have
provided the details of 73,200, 153,700 and 45,000 vehicles,
respectively.
The sources said the customs department will also
provide the details of vehicles imported during the past five years,
including those cleared under the amnesty scheme announced in 2013.
They said a number of smuggled vehicles are being used, especially in rural areas.
An
official at Regional Tax Office (RTO) Karachi said vehicles were also
cleared on fake identity for which customs authorities are responsible.
The customs cleared around 51,200 vehicles under the amnesty scheme 2013 and earned the FBR Rs16.2 billion as duty and taxes.
“The
amnesty was granted on clearance and a vehicle owner is required to
file income tax returns and declare source of income,” said the source.
However,
the FBR failed to identify the real ownership due to apathy of customs
department fraught with corruption and misconduct.
The Federal Tax Ombudsman, in 2014, released a detailed report on irregularities in clearance of imported vehicles.
“Granting
amnesty to smuggling is counterproductive as it promotes smuggling,
emboldens smugglers and contributes to black economy,” the report said.
It
further said luxury vehicles were mostly smuggled to cater to the upper
class, adding that therefore the amnesty was more undesirable and
against the national interest.
“Apart from the conceptual
irrational and counter-productivity of amnesty for smuggled vehicles,
the amnesty scheme 2013 was allegedly misused for corrupt motives by the
customs staff for regularising such vehicles as had either not yet
arrived in the country or these were not physically presented or
actually seized by the customs,” the report said.
Besides, many
tampered and stolen vehicles might have been granted amnesty due to weak
or non-checking of tampering and absence of any filer for stolen
vehicles, it said.
“It will be difficult to cross-match the data
of imported vehicles with those registered with the provincial
authorities in such as scenario,” said a source in the Inland Revenue.
Source: Geo tv
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