Module - 1 Basic Concepts.
Module - 1 Basic Concepts.
Unit 1: (4 Hours)
Income Tax Act, 1961, Basic Concepts and definitions, Capital and revenue – receipts,
expenditures, Basis of charge and scope of total income , Residential Status and Incidence of
Tax, Incomes which do not form part of Total Income (Sec.10), Tax Planning, Tax Evasion and
Tax Management. (Problems on residential Status of Individual assessee).
Income Tax Act, 1961 is an act to levy, administrate, collect & recover Income-tax in India. It
came into force from 1st April 1962.
it is the tax that is collected by Central Government for each financial year levied on total taxable
income of an assessee during the previous year.
Type of Taxes:
Income Tax holds its importance for it is the money which tends to support the running of our
government. It is one of the major sources of revenue for the government and thus is inevitable
to not to impose it on the income earned or utilized in the country. It helps meet the funds
required to develop the country and other defense related needs of a nation.
Direct Tax is tax that is paid by an individual or any other person on the basis of his Income. It is
a form of tax that is directly paid by the person to the government, i.e., the liability to pay the tax
and the burden of tax falls on the same person.
Indirect taxes are the types of taxes where the person depositing the tax with government and
the person actually having been burdened by the tax are different. Generally these taxes are
included in the prices of the goods or services which are provided to the people and then such
taxes are deposited by the person collecting the same from their customers. GST is one of the
most popular types of indirect tax.
Every income arising to any person will always be classified under one of the following headers
provided by the Act: -
1. Salaries
2. Income from house property
3. Profit and gains of business or profession
4. Capital gains
5. Income from other sources
(a) every person in respect of whom any proceeding under this Act has been taken for the
assessment of his income or assessment of fringe benefits or of the income of any other person in
respect of which he is assessable, or of the loss sustained by him or by such other person, or of
the amount of refund due to him or to such other person ;
(b) every person who is deemed to be an assessee under any provision of this Act ;
(c) every person who is deemed to be an assessee in default under any provision of this Act ;
Person:
As per section 2(31) of Income-Tax Act 1961, a Person would be any one who is-
An Individual
A HUF (Hindu Undivided Family)
A Company
A Firm
An association of person or body of individuals whether incorporated or not
A local Authority
Every artificial and juridical person who is not included in any of the above mentioned
category.
Assessment:
Assessment is primarily a process of determining the correctness of income declared by the
assessee and calculating the amount of tax payable by him and further procedure of imposing
that tax liability on that person.
Income:
The definition of Income as per section 2 (24) is inclusive but not exhaustive of below mentioned
items:
Any illegal income arising to the assessee
Any income that is received at irregular intervals
Any Taxable income that have been received from asource outside India
Any benefit that can be measured in money
Any subsidy or relief or reimbursement
Gift the value of which exceed INR 50,000 without any consideration by an individual or
HUF.
Any prize
Causal incomes like winning from lotteries or horse race gambling etc.
Agricultural income ; under section 2(1A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Refers to income earned or revenue derived from sources that include farming land, buildings on
or identified with an agricultural land and commercial produce from a horticultural land
According to this Section, agricultural income generally means:
(a) Any rent or revenue derived from land which is situated in India and is used for agricultural
purposes.
(b) Any income derived from such land by agriculture operations including processing of
agricultural produce so as to render it fit for the market or sale of such produce.
(c) Any income attributable to a farm house subject to satisfaction of certain conditions specified
in this regard in section 2(1A).
Agricultural income
Agriculture income is not taxable.
agricultural income”means
[(a) any rent or revenue derived from land which is situated in India and is used for
agricultural purposes;]
(b) any income derived from such land by—
(i) agriculture; or
(ii) the performance by a cultivator or receiver of rent-in-kind of any process
ordinarily employed by a cultivator or receiver of rent-in-kind to render the produce raised or
received by him fit to be taken to market; or
(iii) the sale by a cultivator or receiver of rent-in-kind of the produce raised or
received by him, in respect of which no process has been performed other than a process of the
nature described in paragraph (ii) of this sub-clause ;
(c) any income derived from any building owned and occupied by the receiver of the
rent or revenue of any such land, or occupied by the cultivator or the receiver of rent-in-kind, of
any land with respect to which, or the produce of which, any process mentioned in paragraphs
(ii) and (iii) of sub-clause (b) is carried
If GTI is nil, then no deduction is allowable, or the amount of deduction cannot exceed GTI i.e.
deduction is allowable only to the extent of gross total income.
(80C to 80U) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 deals with deductions.
Example: Life insurance premium paid, medical insurance premium paid, donations to charitable
institutions, etc.
The exemption is derived from the word exempt which means an amount which is not liable to
something. In income tax, exemption refers to those incomes which are not considered while
Comparison Chart
BASIS FOR
DEDUCTION EXEMPTION
COMPARISON
Conditional Yes No
Revenue receipts,
Revenue Receipts are those receipts which neither reduce the assets of the company nor they
create any liability. They are always recurring in nature and they are earned during the normal
course of business.
Examples of Revenue Receipts
a. Revenue earned by selling off waste/scrap material
b. Discount received from vendors
c. Services provided (When a firm provides services to its clients or customers, they earn
revenues.)
d. Interest received (If a firm has put their money in any bank or financial institution)
e. Rent received
f. Dividend received
Because such assets provide income-generating value for a company for a period of years,
companies are not allowed to deduct the full cost of the asset in the year the expense is incurred;
they must recover the cost through year-by-year depreciation over the useful life of the asset.
Companies often use debt financing or equity financing to cover the substantial costs involved in
acquiring major assets for expanding their business.
Revenue expenditures,
Revenue expenses are shorter-term expenses that are broken down into two categories:
Expenditures for generating revenue include expenses required to meet the ongoing
operational costs of running a business, and thus are essentially the same as operating
expenses. Unlike capital expenditures, revenue expenses can be fully tax-deducted in the
same year the expenses occur.
Expenditures for maintenance of revenue-generating assets include the ordinary
repair and maintenance costs that are necessary to keep the asset in working order
without substantially improving or extending the useful life of the asset. Revenue
expenses related to existing assets include repairs and regular maintenance as well as
repainting and renewal expenses. Revenue expenditures can be considered to be recurring
expenses in contrast to the one-off nature of most capital expenditures.
Residential Status ;
The taxability of an individual in India depends upon his residential status in India for any
particular financial year. The term residential status has been coined under the income tax laws
of India and must not be confused with an individual’s citizenship in India. An individual may be
a citizen of India but may end up being a non-resident for a particular year. Similarly, a foreign
citizen may end up being a resident of India for income tax purposes for a particular year.
Also to note that the residential status of different types of persons viz an individual, a firm, a
company etc is determined differently. In this article, we have discussed about how the
residential status of an individual taxpayer can be determined for any particular financial year
For the purpose of income tax in India, the income tax laws in India classifies taxable persons as:
a. A resident
b. A resident not ordinarily resident (RNOR)
c. A non-resident (NR)
Reside
RESIDENTIAL
STATUS
NON
NON RESIDENT
RESIDENT OF
OF
RESIDENT
RESIDENT OF
OF INDIA
INDIA INDIA
INDIA (NRI)
(NRI)
EXAMPTIONs; Basic condition (b) is not taken into consideration in two special cases given
below.
Special case 1; it covers an Indian citizen who leaves India during the previous year for the
purpose of employment outside India or an Indian citizen who leaves India during the previous
year as a member of the crew of an Indian ship. For this purpose, the requirement is not leaving
India for taking employment outside India but leaving India for the purpose of employment (the
employment may be in India or may be outside India). To put it differently, the individual need
not be an unemployed person. He may be employed in India and Leave India during the previous
year on a foreign assignment of his employer company. Alternatively, he may be an unemployed
person who goes outside India to take an employment outside India.
Special case 2; it covers an Indian citizen or a person of Indian origin who comes on a visit to
India during the previous year. A person is deemed to be of Indian Origin if he, or either of his
parents or any of his grandparents, was born in undivided India. It may be noted that grand-
parents include both maternal and paternal grandparents.
b. Any sum received by a Co-parcener from Hindu Undivided Family (H.U.F.) [Section
10(2)]
As per section 10(2), amount received out of family income, or in case of impartible estate,
amount received out of income of family estate by any member of such HUF is exempt from tax.
Tax Planning,
Tax Evasion
It is the general term for efforts by individuals, corporations, trusts and other entities to evade
taxes by illegal means. Tax evasion usually entails taxpayers deliberately misrepresenting or
concealing the true state of their affairs to the tax authorities to reduce their tax liability, and
includes, in particular, dishonest tax reporting (such as declaring less income, profits or gains
than actually earned; or overstating deductions).
Tax Management.
Every assessee liable to pay tax needs to manage his/her taxes. Tax management relates to
management of finances for payment of tax, assessing the advance tax liability to pay tax in time.
Tax management has nothing to do with planning to save tax it is just related with operational
aspect of payment of tax i.e. while managing his taxes a person ensures that he/she is making
timely payment of taxes without running out of the money and he is complying with all the
provisions of the law.
Tax management means, the management of finances, for the purpose of paying tax.
The objective of Tax Management is to comply with the provisions of Income Tax Law
and its allied rules
Tax Management deals with filing of Return in time, getting the accounts audited,
deducting tax at source etc.
Tax Management relates to Past ,. Present, Future.
Past – Assessment Proceedings, Appeals, Revisions etc.
Present – Filing of Return, payment of advance tax etc.
Future – To take corrective action
Tax Management helps in avoiding payment of interest, penalty, prosecution .
Tax Management is essential for every assessee.
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