GST officers have started seeking
clarification from companies whose tax payments did not match with the e-way
bills generated, as revenue authorities start matching supplies data to check
tax evasion, sources said.
Touted as an anti-evasion measure, e-way bill system was
rolled out on April 1, 2018, for moving goods worth over Rs 50,000 from one
state to another. The same for intra or within the state movement was rolled
out in a phased manner from April 15, 2018.
Following this, it has come to the notice of tax officers that
some transporters are doing multiple trips by generating only a single e-way bill or not
reflecting e-way bill invoices while filing sales return. It has also come to the
notice that certain businesses are not generating e-way bills even as supplies
are being made.
Goods and Services Tax Network
(GSTN), the company which handles the technology backbone for GST, has started
sharing details of e-way bills vis-a-vis taxes paid to help tax officers
identify any discrepancy, sources added.
In one of the letters issued by Ghaziabad GST commissionerate,
a taxpayer has been asked to provide "clarification" within three
days on the difference between taxes paid and the liability which the tax
officer has ascertained after analysing sales return GSTR-3B and e-way bill data for the
period October 2018 and January 2019.
Matching of invoices of e-way bills with the sales shown in sales
returns helps taxmen in assessing whether the supplies have been accurately
shown in the returns and GST paid on the
same.
GSTN has also provided the facility to businesses to include
details of e-way bills generated while filing the final monthly sales return under GSTR-1 to avoid double data
entry.
The government is banking on anti-evasion measures to meet its GST
collection target for the current fiscal.
For fiscal 2019-20, the government proposes to collect Rs 6.10
lakh crore from Central GST and Rs 1.01 lakh crore as compensation cess. The
Integrated GST balance has been pegged at Rs 50,000 crore.
AMRG & Associates Partner Rajat Mohan said tax officers have
started using the pile of GSTN data retrieved through return filings and e-way
bill mechanics to carve out a summary reconciliation statement of estimated tax
liability, compelling businesses to justify the outward tax liabilities in a
comprehensive manner.
"Tax authorities would be at fault if they presume that
reconciliation difference is due to tax
evasion only. There be other reasons for this
difference like clerical errors, cut off supplies and pre-delivery expiry of
e-way bills," Mohan added.
To further streamline the e-way bill system, GSTN is planning some
changes, including auto calculation of route distance based on PIN code and
blocking of generation of multiple e-way bills on one invoice/document.
The matching of e-way bill data with that of tax payment is in
addition to analysis being done by GSTN by matching taxes paid in summary sales
return GSTR-3B and final returns GSTR-1.
Also, businesses whose GSTR-1 did not match with GSTR-2A, which is
a purchase return auto-generated by system from the seller's return, have been
flagged by GSTN systems.
Based on this, last year tax officers sent scrutiny notices to
taxpayers seeking explanation for the reason for the discrepancies.
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