In a case where the outstanding demand is disputed before Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or CIT (A), the Assessing Officer can grant stay of demand till disposal of first appeal on payment of 20 per cent of the disputed amount, as per a recent circular of the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT).
Earlier, the threshold for obtaining stay on outstanding demand was 15 per cent of the disputed tax demand.
Giving rationale behind increasing the threshold, the CBDT said after a review it was found that the standard rate of 15 per cent of the disputed amount was on "the lower side" and hence, it was decided to increase it to 20 per cent.
Naveen Wadhwa, DGM, Taxmann.Com opined that the hike in deposits is aimed at reducing the frivolous appeals by taxpayers.
Tax expert with PwC India Abhishek Goenka said the increase in the quantum does not augur well for taxpayers and "if the intention" is indeed to move to a non-adversarial tax regime, then if anything the quantum should have been reduced.
"In any case, where the taxpayer loses on appeal, he is liable to pay interest, and asking for a higher up front payment will cause hardship to many taxpayers, particularly, since there continue to be assessments that are high pitched," Goenka said.
During the 2016-17 fiscal, it resulted in disputed tax effect of Rs 1.92 lakh crore being unlocked in 362 cases, it said.
As per the ministry, the appeals having tax effect of less than Rs 10 lakh amount to around 66 per cent of the pendency of the appeals before CIT (A) and only 1.6 per cent in disputed tax effect.
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