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Tuesday 19 June 2012

Medical, House Rent & Conveyance Allowance Expenditure and Tax liability.

Medical, House Rent & Conveyance Allowance Expenditure and Tax liability.


When Employer paid salary to employee in breakup form like as Basic, Dearness allowance, House Rent Allowance, Conveyance Allowance and Medical Allowance etc. either in Private Sector or Public Sector, the question is arise that whether the paid salary or entire salary amount is taxable or exempted. How to calculate tax liability on drawn salary ? etc. thus the some clarification regarding such type of queries of Employer as follows:

1. Medical Allowance:
  • Only reimbursement of medical expenses up to Rs. 15,000/- is exempt from income tax. Amount received over and above Rs. 15,000/- is taxable as “Income From Salary”.
  • Fixed Medical allowance is taxable in the hand of employee. It is not plainly exempt from income tax even if it is actually expended for medical treatment by the employee.
2. House Rent Allowance (HRA):
In respect of HRA, the least of the following is exempt from tax u/s 10(13A):
  • 40% of salary (50% for Mumbai, Kolkata, Delhi and Chennai).
  • HRA for the period the house is occupied by the employee.
  • The excess of rent paid over 10% of salary. However, an employee living in his own house or where he does not pay any rent is not eligible for this exemption.
3. Conveyance Allowance:
Any allowance granted to meet the expenditure incurred on conveyance in performance of duties of an office or employment of profit is fully exempt from tax u/s. 10(14) read with Rule 2BB (1)(c). However, transport allowance for commuting between residence and place of duty is exempt up to Rs 800/- per month.

Yearly Income upto Rs. 7.85 Lakhs, no need of Income Tax after Budger-2012

Yearly Income upto Rs. 7.85 Lakhs, no need of Income Tax after Budger-2012


After increasing the limit of Income Tax Exemption from Rs. 1.80 Lakh to 2.00 Lakhs annually the Female got profit of Rs. 1030 and Male of Rs. 2060 and since they had a higher limit of Rs 1.9 lakh. Senior citizens gain nothing since they were even now not paying tax below Rs 2.5 lakh a year.

The shift in slabs with 30% kicking in at Rs 10 lakh, not Rs 8 lakh, means those between these two limits save anything from Rs 2,060 to Rs 22,660 per annum (or Rs 1,030 to 21,630 for women), while those with annual incomes above Rs 10 lakh save Rs 22,660 (or Rs 21,630), irrespective of their income. For senior citizens, savings are at best Rs 20,600.

While the maximum exemption limit remains at Rs 5 lakh (for those aged above 80), it is theoretically possible to have an income of Rs 7.85 lakh and not pay any tax. Here's how: A very senior citizen (defined as someone aged over 80) who takes a home loan with an interest of Rs 1.5 lakh per annum, invests Rs 1 lakh under section 80C, pays a premium of Rs 20,000 on medical insurance and claims deduction of Rs 15,000 for medical expenses can achieve this feat.

For those aged between 60 and 80, the corresponding figure would be Rs 5.35 lakh and for those below 60 it would be Rs 4.85 lakh.

Tax exemption on savings account interest income up to Rs 10,000 means if you are in the 30% tax bracket it makes more sense to keep amounts up to Rs 1.4 lakh in an SB a/c that gives 7% interest rather than putting it in a fixed deposit, where the income would be taxed.

Since FD rates are at best about 9% now, that would be equivalent to a post-tax return of about 6.3% for those in the highest tax bracket. For those with salary incomes up to Rs 5 lakh and interest income below Rs 10,000, this change also means they need not file tax returns if they have no other income.

If you're purchasing a property (other than agricultural land) worth Rs 50 lakh in urban areas or Rs 20 lakh in rural areas, be prepared to have 1% of the registered sale value deducted at source as tax.

If you were planning to buy a large car, think again. Excise duties on them are up from 22% to 24% in some cases and from 24% to 27% in others. So, you'll end up paying an additional sum of Rs 12,000 or more. If your dream vehicle was an imported SUV worth in excess of $40,000, the extra bill is even steeper with import duties up from 60% to 75%. On an S-class Merc, it could mean an extra Rs 3 lakh or more.

Luxury, in general, got even more expensive with customs and excise duties as well as service tax up on virtually everything from gold to air travel to eating out and hotels. Mobile bills too will rise due to increased service tax.

On Cash Payment of more than 10,000 at a time no deduction under section 80G.

On Cash Payment of more than 10,000 at a time no deduction under section 80G.




On cash payment of more than 10,000 at a time no deduction under section 80G of new sub-clause 5(D) of income tax Act, there will be no deduction in case donation is made in cash more than 10,000. Before this amendment there was no such limitation of cash payment of Rs.10,000 etc. This amendment will be effect from 01st April 2013 and will accordingly apply in relation to assessment year 2013-14 and subsequent assessment years.

Amendment of section 80G vide finance Bill 2012 dated 16.03.2012

27. In section 80G of the Income-tax Act, after sub-section (5C), the following sub-section shall be inserted with effect from the 1st day of April, 2013, namely -

“(5D) No deduction shall be allowed under this section in respect of donation of any sum exceeding ten thousand.

Section 54EC of Income Tax and Log Term Capital Gain

Section 54EC of Income Tax and Log Term Capital Gain


1. Section 54EC of the Income-tax Act, 1961 allows a deduction in respect of long-term capital gains arising from transfer of any long-term capital asset ("original asset") where the following conditions are satisfied:
  • The assessee invests the whole or any part of such long-term capital gains in the long-term specified asset i.e. bonds redeemable after three years issued by NHAI/REC.
  • Such investment is made "at any time within a period of six months after the date of such transfer".
  • The investment so made by an assessee during any financial year does not exceed Rs. 50 lakhs. This condition is imposed by the Proviso to section 54EC(1).
If all the above conditions are satisfied, any assessee shall be entitled to deduction of entire amount of capital gains if the entire amount is so invested. If only part of the capital gains is invested, deduction of proportionate amount shall be allowed. It should be noted that the interest from the NHAI/REC bonds (long-term specified asset) are not tax-free but liable to be taxed in full.

Interpretation of the proviso to section 54EC(1) - The Rs. 50 Lakhs Cap

2. The proviso to section 54EC(1) reads as under:
"Provided that the investment made on or after the 1st day of April, 2007 in the long term specified asset by an assessee during any financial year does not exceed fifty lakh rupees"

The question that arises in respect of the proviso to section 54EC(1) is whether the cap of Rs. 50 lakhs imposed by it applies to investment in a financial year or to the deduction allowable in respect of a financial year. In other words, can an assessee who transfers a capital asset in the second-half of a financial year i.e. on or after 30th September and makes a capital gain of Rs. 1 crore or more, claim a deduction of Rs. 1 crore by investing Rs. 1 crore in specified bonds within 6 months of transfer Rs. 50 lakhs in the financial year of transfer of capital asset and Rs. 50 lakhs in next financial year?

In a recent decision - Aspi Ginwala v. Asstt. CIT [2012] 20 taxmann.com 75 (Ahd. - Trib.), the Tribunal answered the above question in the affirmative. The Tribunal held that it is clear from the proviso to section 54EC(1) that where assessee transfers his capital asset after 30th September of the financial year he gets an opportunity to make an investment of Rs. 50 lakhs each in two different financial years and is able to claim exemption upto Rs. 1 crore under section 54EC of the Act. Since the language of the proviso is clear and unambiguous, assessee is entitled to get exemption upto Rs. 1 crore.

Practical difficulty - However, even though law as interpreted by the Tribunal permits deduction of Rs. 1 crore to be claimed under section 54EC by following the above strategy, a practical difficulty arises. What if there is no issue of REC/NHAI bonds open to invest in next financial year during the time-limit of 6 months from date of transfer of capital asset? In the above case, the assessee sold his property on 22-10-2007 and invested Rs. 50 lakhs in specified bonds (REC Bonds) on 31-12-2007 (i.e. within the 6 months period). Assessee invested Rs. 50 lakhs in NHAI bonds in next financial year on 26-5-2008 (after the 6 months time limit) since, there were no specified bonds available for subscription from 1st April, 2008 to 21-4-2008 during the next financial year. As during this period from 1-4-2008 to 26-5-2008 subscription in eligible investment was closed, the investment made by the assessee on 26-5-2008 i.e. 1st day of the reopening of the subscription of eligible investment in NHAI Bonds and assessee contented that this should be treated to be in time. Relying on the following passage from Ram Agarwal v. Jt. CIT [2002] 81 ITD 163 (Mum.) in the context of section 54F, the ITAT upheld assessee's contention:

"In regard to claim of exemption under section 54F we may mention that it is found by the learned CIT(A) that the bank was closed on 31-8-1995 on account of strike as certified by the officials of the concerned bank. From the certification given by the bank officials, the assessee had approached the bank officials with the cheque for the amount of deposit on 30-8-1995. The assessee remained unable to obtain receipt on 31-8-1995 due to bank strike and the cheque was cleared on 1-9-1995. In this view of the situation, it can well be said that the deposit of the assessee was in accordance with the provisions of statute as on the last date i.e. the 31-8-1995, the deposit could not be made due to the reason which was beyond the control of the assessee particularly in view that the efforts were made by the assessee a day prior to last date to deposit the requisite amount in the bank to make him entitle for exemption under sec. 54F. ………."

Since no contrary decision was cited on behalf of the Revenue, ITAT applied the above decision and held that the investments made by the assessee on 26-05-2008 beyond six months is eligible for exemption in view of the fact that no subscription for eligible investment was available to the assessee from 1st April, 2008 to 26-05-2008. The whole idea appears to be not to penalize an assessee where he is not at fault and unable to comply due to reasons beyond his control and acts with due diligence to comply at the first opportunity available to him.

Thus, the strategy for maximizing the exemption under section 54EC is as under:
  • Transfer long-term capital asset from which taxable capital gains will be Rs. 1 crore or more in the second half of a financial year i.e. after 30th September but on or before 31st March.
  • Invest Rs. 50 lakhs in specified bonds in the financial year of transfer itself.
  • Invest Rs. 50 lakhs in specified bonds in the next financial year within 6 months time-limit i.e. 6 months from the date of transfer of capital asset. If no issue of specified bonds is open during next financial year, then investRs. 50 lakhs on the first day of opening of the first issue of eligible bonds (REC/NHAI bonds) during the next financial year.
Contrary Decision of ITAT

3. In Asstt. CIT v. Shri Raj Kumar Jain & Sons (HUF) [2012] 19 taxmann.com 27 (Jp.), the ITAT had taken a contrary view since taking a view that assessee who transfers a capital asset in the second half of a financial year (1st October to 31st March) can claim a deduction of Rs. 1 crore is unfair to assessees who transfer a capital asset in the 1st half of a financial year who can claim a deduction of only Rs. 50 lakhs. The Tribunal observed as under:

"The ld. DR during the course of proceedings before us has fairly contended that the interpretation which the ld. AR wants to place on the proviso to Section 54EC will enable the assessee to claim exemption of around Rs. 1.00 crore. In case, the transfer of assets has taken place from 1st Oct. to 31st March because the assessee will be able to invest Rs. 50.00 lakhs in a financial year in which the transfer has taken place and Rs. 50.00 lakhs in subsequent financial year. However, the assessee's who have earned the capital gain on transfer of assets from Ist April to 30th Sept. will be able to have deduction only of Rs. 50.00 lakhs. We therefore, feel that assessee in the instant case is entitled to exemption of Rs. 50.00 lakhs u/s 54EC and it is not the case where two interpretations of Section 54EC are possible"
Departmental views in CBDT Circulars

4. CBDT's Circular No. 3/2008, dated 12-3-2008 explains the proviso introduced by the Finance Act, 2007 as under:
"28.2 The quantum of investible bonds issued by NHAI and REC being limited, it was felt necessary to ensure that the benefit was available to all the investor. For this purpose, it was necessary to ensure that the limited number of bonds available for subscription is also available for small investors. Therefore, with a view to ensure equitable distribution of benefits amongst prospective investors, the Government decided to impose a ceiling on the quantum of investment that could be made in such bonds. Accordingly, the said section has been amended so as to provide for a ceiling on investment by an assessee in such long-term specified assets. Investments in such specified assets to avail exemption under section 54EC, on or after April 1, 2007 will not exceed fifty lakh rupees in a financial year."

Thus, the above CBDT Circular not brought before ITAT in either of the above cases speaks of 'ceiling on quantum of investment' rather than 'ceiling on quantum of deduction'.

Where the Act or even Departmental Circulars intend that it is a ceiling on deduction in respect of amounts invested in a financial year rather than a ceiling on quantum of investment to be made in a financial year, they say so explicitly. Take the example of section 80CCF. The text of section 80CCF reads as under:

"Deduction in respect of subscription to long-term infrastructure bonds.

80CCF. In computing the total income of an assessee, being an individual or a Hindu undivided family, there shall be deducted, the whole of the amount, to the extent such amount does not exceed twenty thousand rupees, paid or deposited, during the previous year relevant to the assessment year beginning on the 1st day of April, 2011 or to the assessment year beginning on the 1st day of April, 2012, as subscription to long-term infrastructure bonds as may, for the purposes of this section, be notified by the Central Government."

Thus, section 80CCF clearly says that invest all that you want in infrastructure bonds but deduction shall be limited to Rs. 20,000 and only what is paid or deposited during the previous year will be considered for deduction under that section. If same interpretation was to be placed on the proviso to section 54EC(1)-that amount of deduction will be limited to Rs. 50 lakhs and only amounts deposited during financial year shall be considered, nothing prevented Parliament from drafting the proviso to section 54EC(1) along the lines of section 80CCF.

CBDT's Circular No. 1/2011, dated 6-4-2011 explains section 80CCF as under:
"14. Deduction in respect of long-term infrastructure bonds
14.1 In tune with the policy thrust of promoting investment in the infrastructure sector, a new section 80CCF was inserted in the Income-tax Act to provide that subscription during the financial year 2010-11 made to long-term infrastructure bonds (as may be notified by the Central Government), to the extent of Rs. 20,000, shall be allowed as deduction….."

5. It is clear from CBDT's Circular No. 3/2008, dated 12-3-2008 as also from a comparison of section 54EC and section 80CCF thatthe cap of Rs. 50 Lakhs in the proviso to section 54EC(1) is an investment cap and not a deduction cap. The decision of the Tribunal in Aspi Ginwala (supra) is in line with the language of the provisions of the Act and CBDT's Circulars. It is submitted that the contrary views of ITAT in Shri Raj Kumar Jain & Sons (HUF)(supra) (which appears to be guided by notions of unfairness to assessees who transfer assets in the first half of the financial year rather than the text of the provisions and CBDT circulars) needs reconsideration. In any case, if two contrary views are there on an issue, Tribunal will be guided by the view favourable to the assessee. From that angle, the view in Aspi Ginwala (supra) has to be preferred to the view in Shri Raj Kumar Jain & Sons (HUF)(supra). This principle has been endorsed by ITAT in a recent case where there were two contrary ITAT decisions on non-compete fee and view favourable to assessee was applied by Tribunal to decide the case.

Donation Deductions and section 80GGC & 80GGB of Income Tax Act, 1961.

Donation Deductions and section 80GGC & 80GGB of Income Tax Act, 1961.


Donation regarding Section 80GGB to Polication parties are exempt from Income Tax, such question are still pending with Assessee.  Thus the some clarification are follows:

If you have contributed any amount to a recognised political party, you are eligible to claim a tax deduction ranging from 50 percent to 100 percent of the amount under Section 80GGC for individuals and Section 80GGB for corporate organisations. One can contribute up to 10 percent of one’s gross total income to a political party.

These deductions, along with the common ones like medical benefits, HRA, home loan EMIs, etc. can help you save a considerable amount of tax every year.

Deduction in respect of contributions given by any person to political parties.
80GGC. In computing the total income of an assessee, being any person, except local authority and every artificial juridical person wholly or partly funded by the Government, there shall be deducted any amount of contribution made by him, in the previous year, to a political party or an electoral trust.

For the purposes of sections 80GGB and 80GGC, “political party” means a political party registered under section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951)

Deduction in respect of contributions given by companies to political parties.
80GGB. In computing the total income of an assessee, being an Indian company, there shall be deducted any sum contributed by it, in the previous year to any political party or an electoral trust.

For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that for the purposes of this section, the word “contribute”, with its grammatical variation, has the meaning assigned to it under section 293A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956).

A view about Effect of Budget on Income Tax For Financial Year 2012-13.

A view about Effect of Budget on Income Tax For Financial Year 2012-13.


Year Budget Effected on Tax Policies for nest Financial Year all taxpayee knows although it more effected on Income Tax except other Tax i.e. Service Tax, Excise Tax etc. A common Man watches all on Budget every year only for projection of income and saving of tax. Some Important Changes in this Financial Year 2012-13 by Budget-2012 are as follows:
  1. Rajiv Gandhi Equity Savings scheme: It will provide income tax deduction of 50% for those who invest upto Rs.50,000 directly into equities and whose annual income is less than Rs.10 lakh, subject to a three -year lock in.
  2. Implementation of Direct tax code has again been deferred and won’t be applicable from 1st April, 2012.
  3. Exemption limit raised to Rs 2 lakhs from Rs 1.8 lakh. 30% slab now starts from 10 lakh rather than 8 lakh earlier. Men and women now have same tax slab. No gender bias.
  4. Within the existing limit for deduction allowed for health insurance, Rs 5000 deduction for preventive health checkup is allowed.
  5. Deduction of upto 10,000 for interest from savings bank accounts under a new section 80TTA. 
  6. Senior citizens not having income from business proposed to be exempted from payment of advance tax.
  7. Securities Transaction tax (STT) reduced to 0.1% from 0.125%
  8. Exemption from Capital Gains tax on sale of residential property, if sale consideration is used for subscription in equity of a manufacturing SME for purchase of new plant and machinery.
  9. Service tax rate increased to 12% from current 10%. This would mean more taxes in your mobile, telephone, internet, restaurant bills and life insurance premium etc.
  10. Import duty free amount limit raised to Rs 35000 from 25000. So guys coming from abroad can bring more stuff.
  11. Gold to be more expensive. Customs duty on standard gold raised from 2 per cent to 4 per cent.
  12. Duty on large cars raised to 27%, so cars would be more expensive now.
  13. Tax saving mutual funds (ELSS) deduction to continue.
  14. 80C deduction on insurance policies purchased after 1st April, 2012 only if premium is less than 10% of sum assured. Benefit for existing purchased policies to continue.
  15. 1% TDS on any immovable property sale above 50 lakh (20 lakh in case of non-urban areas).
  16. 1% tax at source on cash purchases of jewellery over Rs 2 lakh.
  17. 80CCF deduction for infrastructure bonds not valid anymore. 
  18. Income tax return filing would be now mandatory for every resident having any asset located outside India irrespective of the fact whether the resident taxpayer has taxable income or not.
  19. 80G deduction not applicable in case donation is done in form of case for amount over Rs 10,000.

New TaxNet Prooject-2013 by Income Tax Department

New TaxNet Prooject-2013 by Income Tax Department


NEW TAXNET PROJECT 2013 Dated: 10.05.2012

The TAXNET Project (WAN & LAN) of Income Tax Department (ITD), operational from 2008, includes MPLS network (including 155 VSAT locations) at more than 700 locations spread in more than 500 cities across the country. The Department has now embarked upon conceptualizing and implementing the next phase of TAXNET Project, which is expected to commence from 2013. With this background, ITD would like to solicit inputs from the industry with regard to the following:

1. Technology innovation.
2. Terrestrial reach. For this purpose the current location details of the ITD Offices on TAXNET is enclosed.
3. Project implementation period with an objective to minimize the transition period.
4. Any other suggestions.

The response may be mailed to prabhatgupta@incometaxindia.gov.in by or before 21st May 2012.