The amnesty scheme is a "practical and pragmatic" approach to bring back the black money stashed abroad, the chairman of Assocham's Legal Affairs Council R K Handoo said on the sidelines of the release of a study on black money here today.
In 1997, the government had raised about Rs 10,000 crore through the Voluntary Disclosure of Income Scheme (VDIS). However, it sparked an outrage as there were counter arguments that schemes like VDIS penalise honest tax payers and at the same time encourage tax evaders.
Handoo, however, said the government can again approach the Supreme Court for clearance and issue an Executive Order for introducing the amnesty scheme after getting permission from the apex court.
Notably, Assocham termed the estimate of USD 2 trillion worth of black money stashed overseas as "unverifiable and based on assumptions", arrived at through studies undertaken on various reports.
The amnesty scheme suggested by the industry chamber is limited to six months and suggests a 40 per cent tax on voluntarily disclosed funds topped with a ten per cent investment of the total money brought back in infrastructure bonds.
Among other suggestions to curb generation of black money, the study suggests transparency in political funding by removing the election expense ceiling, real-time disclosure of all sources of funds and expenses and partial funding of election expenses for all serious candidates and parties.
Recognising that property transactions are a major source of generation of black money where widespread under reporting is common practice, the study said the government should introduce a uniform stamp duty rate of three per cent applicable across the country.
Besides, the study calls for governance measures to restrict lure of gold as a saving measure and educate families to hold savings in credible and legal financial instruments that are safe as India is the world's largest consumer of gold.
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