VAT in India
About VAT VAT Terminology VAT News India   Maharashtra VAT Act Delhi VAT Act Uttaranchal VAT Act Contact Us
        Punjab VAT Act      

Value Added Tax in India :: VAT in India, India VAT, VAT Expert India

4/14/2005

Advantages of VAT (Value Added Tax) in India

Filed under:

Advantages of VAT (Value Added Tax) in India

Against these disadvantages are the considerable and weighty advantages. These include:

1) Coverage
If the tax is carried through the retail level, it offers all the economic advantages of a tax that includes the entire retail price within its scope, at the same time the direct payment of the tax is spread out and over a large number of firms instead of being concentrated on particular groups, such as wholesalers or retailers.

If retailers do evade, tax will be lost only on their margins because customers that are registered firms gain nothing if their suppliers fail to collect tax, except delay in payment; they will pay more to the government themselves. Under other forms of sales tax, both seller and customer gain by evading tax. One particular advantage is that of the widening of the tax base by bringing all transactions into the tax net. Specifically, VAT gives the new government the opportunity to bring back into the tax system all those persons and entities who were given tax exemptions in one form or another by the previous regime.

2) Revenue security
VAT represents an important instrument against tax evasion and is superior to a business tax or a sales tax from the point of view of revenue security for three reasons.

In the first place, under VAT it is only buyers at the final stage who have an interest in undervaluing their purchases, since the deduction system ensures that buyers at earlier stages will be refunded the taxes on their purchases. Therefore, tax losses due to undervaluation should be limited to the value added at the last stage. Under a retail sales tax, on the other hand, retailer and consumer have a mutual interest in underdeclaring the actual purchase price.

Secondly, under VAT, if payment of tax is successfully avoided at one stage nothing will be lost if it is picked up at a later stage; and even if it is not picked up subsequently, the government will at least have collected the VAT paid at stages previous to that at which the tax was avoided; while if evasion takes place at the final stage the state will lose only the tax on the value added at that point.

If evasion takes place under a sales tax, on the other hand, all the taxes due on the product are lost to the government.

A significant advantage of the value added form in any country is the cross-audit feature. Tax charged by one firm is reported as a deduction by the firms buying from it. Only on the final sale to the consumer is there no possibility of cross audit. Cross audit is possible with any form of sales tax, but the tax-credit feature emphasises and simplifies it and is likely to make firms more careful not to evade because they know of the possibility of cross check.

3) Selectivity
VAT may be selectively applied to specific goods or business entities. We have already addressed essential goods and small business. In addition the VAT does not burden capital goods because the consumption-type VAT provides a full credit for the tax included in purchases of capital goods. The credit does not subsidize the purchase of capital goods; it simply eliminates the tax that has been imposed on them.

4) Co-ordination of VAT with direct taxation
Most taxpayers cheat on their sales not to evade VAT but to evade personal and corporate income taxes. The operation of a VAT resembles that of the income tax more than that of other taxes, and an effective VAT greatly aids income tax administration and revenue collection. It is interesting to note that when Trinidad and Tobago set out to introduce VAT it chose one of its top income tax administrators as the VAT Commissioner.

It must be stressed once again that if properly implemented VAT can ultimately lead to a reduction in overall rates of tax.

Revenues will not be sacrificed but would in fact be enhanced as a consequence of the broadened tax base. This does not seem to be a bad idea at all.







Value Added Tax

Archives (All)


Categories


Network Sites
Gurgaon Properties
India Real Estate
Travel to India
Education In India
Europe Travel Packages
Mexico Travel
World Famous Stadiums
World Travel News
Travel to Canada
World Travel Forum