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Tax litigation taking toll on economy
Context
Less is more said the Economic Survey released on Monday when it comes to appeals by the income tax department for both direct and indirect tax cases.
Income Tax Department is the biggest litigant but loses 85% of cases, says Survey
Faced with a success rate that is less than 30%, the Survey said the tax department would gain from a reduction in appeals pursued at higher levels of the judiciary besides leading to a reduction of workload on high courts and the Supreme Court
4.7% of GDP
“Together, the claims for indirect and direct tax stuck in litigation by the quarter ending March, 2017, amounted to nearly ₹7.58 lakh crore, over 4.7% of GDP,” the Survey said.
Increasing the workload of the judiciary
It said the government’s persistence with litigation despite high rates of failure was increasing the workload of the judiciary and adding to delays and pendency of cases.
Taking a toll on the economy
- This, it said was “taking a severe toll on the economy in terms of stalled projects, mounting legal costs, contested tax revenues, and reduced investment”.
- While it is difficult to estimate the costs of pendency and delay, the Survey found that more than ₹52,000 crore worth of government infrastructure projects have been stalled by various orders of the courts.
Special Leave Petitions becoming the norm
- The survey also reflected on the tendency of the Supreme Court to eagerly entertain appeals directly from any court or tribunal in the form of Special Leave Petitions (SLPs)
- Initially invoked only in “exceptional circumstances”, SLPs were now an overwhelming feature of practice at the Supreme Court, the survey said.
- The rate at which the Supreme Court admits SLPs increased from about 25% in 2008 to almost 40% in 2016.
- “This rising tendency to grant special leave has fundamentally altered the nature of the Court and created a high level of pendency, nearly 85% of which are SLP cases,” the report said.
Dedicated subject matter courts could be established
- The Survey found that dedicated subject-matter courts could have “profound benefits” as seen in the apex court’s recent experiment with constituting an exclusive bench for taxation produced impressive results.
- This may be replicated for other subject matters, and emulated by other high courts, the Survey said.