A way out of the black hole of kaalaadhan -- Joginder Singh. NaMo, - TopicsExpress



          

A way out of the black hole of kaalaadhan -- Joginder Singh. NaMo, nationalise kaalaadhan by ordinance. A WAY OUT OF THE BLACK HOLE OF BLACK MONEY Monday, 03 November 2014 | Joginder Singh | If the Union Government has the will, it can undertake a slew of measures to bring back illicit funds stashed in tax havens abroad. For example, it can nationalise black money Thanks to the constant prodding of the Supreme Court, the Union Government submitted a list of 627 Indians with foreign bank accounts on October 29. This was to show that the Government was serious about recovering black money stashed abroad. The Attorney General of India said that roughly half of the listed individuals were Indian residents who could be prosecuted in this country. The rest did not live in India and could not be prosecuted against under Indian tax laws. On October 28, the Supreme Court had asked the Government to submit the names of those who have been parking black money in foreign bank accounts within 24 hours. The Court had said: “Don’t give us two or three names but all the names. Give us the entire list… whatever you have got from Germany, France, Switzerland and other countries. What you have disclosed could be a tip of the iceberg. This is going to be the first step — now, disclose everything. We can’t leave the issue completely to you. It may never happen during our time.” On October 29, the Supreme Court did not make public the list submitted to it in a sealed cover by the Centre. The court left it to the Special Investigation Team to carry out the necessary investigation and ensure that a proper probe is done. A Supreme Court bench, led by Chief Justice HL Dattu, also asked the SIT to verify the list given by the Government and submit a status report by the end of November. The bench will take up the matter on December 3. The Government also did not press its application that sought restrictions over the disclosure of the names, due to confidentiality clauses in international treaties. It obtained a permission to raise all its arguments in this regard before the SIT. There are no official estimates of India’s black economy. In 2011, the Government had commissioned a joint study by three think-tanks — the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, National Institute of Financial Management and National Council of Applied Economic Research — to estimate the unaccounted wealth of Indian entities, at home and abroad. The final report is yet to be submitted. Between 2002 and 2011, India was reportedly the fifth largest exporter of illicit money with a total of $343.04 billion. In 2011, it was placed third when $84.93 billion was sent abroad. According to a 2013 report titled Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries: 2002-2011, produced by Global Financial Integrity, a Washington, DC-based non-profit, research and advocacy organisation, Indians salted away $462 billion in overseas tax havens between 1948 and 2008. According to the Central Bureau of Investigation, Indians stashed away $500 billion in tax havens across the world. In 2011, a BJP task force, however, pegged the amount much higher at $1.4 trillion. It is no surprise that the Government has been sitting on information it has received from foreign countries in this regard. For instance, in 2009, Germany handed over a list of Indian account-holders in LGT Bank, Liechtenstein, a European principality. In 2011, France handed over a list of 782 Indian citizens who supposedly hold HSBC accounts in Geneva. On May 27, days after being sworn into office, the BJP-led NDA Government set up a high-powered Special Investigative Team, headed by retired Supreme Court judge MB Shah, to look into the issue. On October 16, it told the apex court that disclosing the names of those who have deposited money in banks abroad jeopardises India’s tax agreements with other nations who have provided the information in the first place. The moot question here is: What can be done to remedy the situation? The Government has two laws which it is using to deal with black money — the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999. Most of the punitive action is taken in the monetary form. In a few cases only have people been arrested. A huge amount of black money that goes out of India through hawala operators is re-routed into the country in the form of foreign direct investment. This was reported in a White Paper on black money, published in 2012 by the Union Ministry of Finance. As per data released by the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion, between April 2000 and March 2011, FDI from Mauritius was 41.80 per cent of the entire FDI received by India, whereas Singapore contributed about 9.17 per cent. This situation can be fixed and the SIT has made some good recommendations. The Government can start making changes by implementing the MC Josh Committee report, which advocated rigorous imprisonment for those convicted under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. This will deter black money holders. The Government should also set up a National Tax Tribunal and report bulky global financial transactions to the law enforcement agencies, much like it is done in America under the USA Patriot Act. Date bound Amnesty schemes, backed by the provision of incarceration, seizure of property, cancellation of foreign passports and black-listing of business should be considered. Another option is to pass a domestic law like the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act introduced by the US. Indian citizens living outside India should report their foreign bank accounts to the Indian Revenue Service, and foreign financial institutions should be required to report to Indian authorities about their Indian clients. Another major recommendation of the SIT is to amend the money laundering Act so that the Enforcement Directorate can attach properties of defaulters who do not bring back black money. These are some effective suggestions, worth consideration For repatriation of black money stashed in foreign banks, the Union Government can also consider promulgating an ordinance to nationalise black money held by Indian citizens in tax havens abroad and bring the money back into the Indian financial system. The proposed ordinance will be in consonance with the Swiss Federal Act on the Restitution of Assets illicitly obtained by Politically Exposed Persons. Most importantly, the Government should have the will to deal with the menace of black money stashed abroad. dailypioneer/columnists/edit/a-way-out-of-the-black-hole-of-black-money.html
Posted on: Mon, 03 Nov 2014 22:16:19 +0000

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