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Industry
seeks IT benefits with retrospective effect
By MSM Desai
Film exporters want the 100 per cent penalty charged with interest on
export earnings by the income tax department waived with retrospective
effect from 1995. The exemptions were given under 80HHC on export earnings
prior to 1995. But the IT department subsequently reversed its decision
because films were not considered as tangible goods, for which exemptions
are usually given.
A high power film delegation led by Rajya Sabha MP, Shatrughan Sinha and
consisting of Pahlaj Nihalani, Yash Chopra, Yash Johar, Ganesh Jain, Amar
Asrani, Chandrakant Mehta and SK Kapur, met union finance minister Yashwant
Sinha in Delhi on June 13. They complained of the hardships the exporters
were facing because of income tax department notices demanding 100 per
cent penalty and interest on export earnings from 1995 till 1999.
Pahlaj Nihalani, president of the Film Exporters Association and All India
Film Producers Council, told SCREEN, " We told Sinha that the industry
had been pleading with the government not to charge income tax on film
exports after 1995, till the government exempted them in the 1998-99 budget
but the benefit was confined to the corporate sector only, and excluded
individual and partnership companies. This anomaly was rectified only
in the 1999-2000 budget but it was not specified from which year. As such
the income tax department was demanding tax on the export earnings with
effect from 1995-96. Prior to this, there was no income tax on export
earnings which led to the increase in export earnings. Following the representations
made by the IFEA right from 1995, exporters had not paid any tax since
it was a disputed matter pending with the government.
"It is impossible for any exporter to keep a record of bills pending
for four long years, and exemptions granted under 80 HHC were disputed
any way. After the 1999-2000 Budget which did not specify that the exemption
is with retrospective effect, the IT department was pouncing on exporters
to paybig money with penalty and interest calculated for four years. But
we did not pay up, because the matter was pending with the government,"
said Nihalani.
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