Depreciation
for power units may be cut to 75%
The
Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) of India is considering a proposal
to lower the hundred per cent depreciation allowance provided in the Income-tax
Act, 1961 for power generation devices and power saving devices like gas
cylinders and wind mills.
The
general opinion among tax authorities is to reduce the existing depreciation
allowance to 75 per cent. The I-T authorities think this alone would bring in
additional revenue of at least Rs 2,000 crore.
The
chief commissioners are of the opinion that continuing with the 100 per cent
depreciation was not advisable since it was a major cause of erosion of revenue,
most of them had opined.
Also
the hundred per cent depreciation has been extensively utilised by certain
unscrupulous corporates to avoid taxation by claiming depreciation through the
sale and lease back method. This is a convoluted accounting method that help
corporates claim depreciation on items that do not actually belong to them.
It
may be pointed out that a series of raids carried out by the investigation wing
of income-tax department had unearthed the practice of bogus sale and lease back
method employed by several corporates.
Source : The Economic Times, November 28, 2001