https://thewire.in/131032/agricultural-income-tax-rich-farmer/
BY RAJUL AWASTHI ON 02/05/2017
BY RAJUL AWASTHI ON 02/05/2017
By taxing
the incomes of only the top 4.1% of total agricultural households, as much as
Rs. 25,000 crore could be collected as agriculture income tax.
Agricultural
income has, for too long, acted as a safe haven for black money. Credit:
Reuters
For a tax reformer,
it is heartening to see that issue of agriculture income taxation finally being
discussed. Of course, those raising the issue at the moment are the Niti Aayog
and chief economic adviser Arvind Subramanian and we are currently unaware of
the extent of their influence on policy-making in the Modi government.
The finance
minister has, of course, issued a swift denial, but still, its mere mention in
mainstream discourse is a crucial development. The taxation of agriculture
income has been an issue considered strictly off-limits when it comes to Indian
tax policy.
From the
inception of our republic under our Constitution, agriculture and the taxation
of agricultural incomes has been a state subject. Accordingly, section 10(1) of
the Income Tax Act, 1961, exempts agricultural income from taxation by the
central government.
Historically,
the agriculture sector was a major contributor to tax revenues. The Mughal
empire, for instance, is estimated to have collected about one-sixth of
national income through the land tax. In
1935, with the passing of the Government of India Act, the right to collect
land revenue, and to tax agricultural income, was transferred to the provinces,
today’s states. Later, the Constitution
also left it to the states to tax agricultural income. Since then, each state has developed its own
agricultural income – tax policy, with wide interstate disparities; basically,
the only agricultural activity that is being taxed by the states is plantation
agriculture now.
Uttar
Pradesh did introduce agricultural income tax in 1948, but repealed it in 1957,
one of six states to flip flop thus in the first decade post-Independence.
Assam introduced agricultural income tax in 1939. But it now levies the tax
with a tax rate of 45% in the highest slab only on tea-cultivation income.
Kerala also levies agriculture income tax on plantations.
One of the
reasons why states may have been reluctant to tax agriculture incomes is they
did not wish to antagonise the vote bank of agriculturists. Moreover, India’s
state legislatures have typically been populated by land owners who have been
loath to impose a tax on themselves. Another reason is that agriculture has
typically been one of the hard-to-tax sectors, along with small businesses and
services. In India in particular, agriculture is even harder to tax as it is
based largely on cash transactions which are hard to track and trace. Cash
transactions not routed through the banking system are difficult to verify and
be used for assessment of agricultural incomes. Books of accounts are not
maintained except in the plantation sector.
The reality
is, in India the agriculture sector is hugely unequal, both in terms of land
holdings and incomes. As per the latest
National Sample Survey, 70th round, the landholding pattern of agricultural
households reveals that the vast majority – almost 70% – have marginal holdings
of below 1 hectare, and a very small percentage – only 0.4% – hold significant
lands of over 10 hectares. Even the proportion of agricultural households
holding a decent sized plot of land which could yield a sufficient amount of
income for a household, i.e., between 4 and 10 hectares is very small.
The
situation is very much the same when it comes to incomes from agriculture. In fact, the very small agricultural
households have to rely on other incomes – wages/salaries, or non-farm business
– to supplement the meager agricultural incomes to eke out a living. Those
holding 10 plus hectares of land, while being only 0.4% of all agricultural
households, capture almost 4% of all agricultural incomes.
This
analysis supports the chief economic adviser’s point that, at the very least,
there is scope to talk about the taxation of agricultural incomes of the very
top level of the agricultural household distribution. Those say with holdings
greater than 4 hectares. These are just 4% of the total agricultural households
but with a share of agricultural income in excess of 20 percent. Of course, it goes without saying that those
with higher holdings have very high incomes which all go completely un-taxed.
One factor
not discussed much in the public discourse is the fact that it is not just
individuals who benefit from the tax exemption of agricultural income. There
are a large number of companies, including large multinational companies, who
also benefit from this exemption. The
top ten companies which claimed exemptions for their agricultural incomes in
the year 2013-14 were the following.
According
to data put out by the income tax department, reported in the Times of India,
in the nine-year period from financial year 2006-07 up to 2014-15, 2,746 income
tax cases declared Rs. 1 crore (10 million) plus agricultural incomes.
Agricultural income declared by taxpayers, in returns filed up to November 28,
2014, for exemption in the 2014-15 assessment year, stood at Rs. 9,338 crore
(Rs 93.38 billion). So, the exemption
for agricultural incomes ends up benefiting medium and large farmers and
agricultural companies, which was surely not the intended outcome. The fact is,
the small and marginal farmers – and that is the vast majority, based on NSS
figures – are simply eking out subsistence livings, and their incomes are in
any case far below the minimum threshold limit of Rs. 250,000 of personal
income taxation to ever be taxable.
The
agriculture sector has long acted as a tax shelter. Taxpayers wishing to
convert black money into white money show ownership of ancestral property in
villages. They are able to obtain fictitious receipts from traders of
agricultural commodities as evidence that they have produced and sold
agricultural produce.
One
infamous case of artificially boosting agricultural income was that of a
prominent politician who owns apple orchards in Shimla. Until 2009, the
orchards yielded annual profits of Rs 10 lakh to Rs 20 lakh. But in 2012, he
filed revised income tax returns showing earnings of Rs 6.5 crore from the
orchards over a period of three years. The investigation by the income tax
department found the apples were shipped on scooters, oil tankers and
motorcycles to a non-functional mandi where they were sold to unknown firms
with non-existent addresses. In effect, the bumper harvest of apples was a
fabrication, and that unaccounted income from other sources was passed off as
agricultural income.
The total
annual agricultural income (from cultivation and livestock) as per the NSS
works out to Rs, 4,16,092.5 crore, as against the total GVA from agriculture,
forestry and fishing for FY 2013-14 which is Rs. 19,02,452 crore. The total income of the very top bracket, as
per NSS data, works out to Rs. 16,084 crore, and that of the top two brackets,
i.e., households with holdings over 4 hectares (about 10 acres), is Rs. 83,433
crore.
So, just by
bringing to tax the incomes of the top 4.1% of total agricultural households,
at an average tax of 30%, as much as Rs. 25,000 crore could be collected as
agriculture income tax. The amount that would be brought to tax as a result of
plugging the tax loophole, would be in addition to this direct revenue.
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