http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/the-black-money-bill-is-like-a-medu-vada-762703

The Black Money Bill Is Like A 'Medu Vada'

Shashi Tharoor

The government has used the extended session of parliament to pass a
new bill in the Lok Sabha as part of its efforts to persuade the
nation that it is serious about tackling the problem of "black money".
Assuming it is soon enacted - which it will be, since it has been
deemed to be a "money bill" and so the Rajya Sabha can do nothing
about it but discuss it and return it to the Lower House - we will
soon have a law on the books to punish Indians who have undeclared
accounts or other assets abroad. Any undeclared amount above Rs.5
lakhs will incur a 120% penalty and result in a stiff jail term for
the offender. But before the righteous pop the champagne corks to
celebrate the prospect of the cells of Tihar Jail overflowing with
well-heeled elites, a few sobering demurrals are in order.

None of us disagrees, obviously, that black money is a serious
problem. The Congress Party has made it very clear that we would
support any serious effort by the Government to bring back black money
to this country. But this Bill has four fatal flaws. Though my party
did support the bill, we did not do so blindly. It has some real
limitations we would have liked to have seen improved.

The first is that this Bill rests on the premise that foreign assets
and foreign accounts are the principal problem in black money. They
are not. Of course, no one has any real idea of the scale of the
problem. The Ministry of Finance says that there is no official
estimate of black money abroad, and they are right. A number of
figures were advanced during the Lok Sabha debate, with the highest,
from a more objective source than Baba Ramdev - the US-based agency
Global Financial Integrity  - placing the sum of illicit transfers out
of India at about Rs. 28 lakh crore. But that figure still doesn't
amount to the  15 lakhs per Indian that the BJP promised to put into
every citizen's account; it actually works out to under Rs. 25,000 per
Indian in black money outside the country.  So, first of all, the
scale of the problem is much smaller than the public has been led to
assume.

The fact is that domestic black money is a much bigger figure (some
say it may be almost as much as the entire official economy) and is a
much larger problem. Yet, domestic tax evasion remains a civilian
offence whereas this Bill criminalizes foreign assets. Let's face it:
this Bill is a pure political diversion by the BJP to distract the
people from the Government's failure to actually tackle black money
generation within India.

In fact, even black money generated abroad is brought back to India as
FDI through so-called round-tripping, especially via investment havens
like Mauritius (from which $4.9 billion dollars came into India during
the last financial year). In other words, there's much more black
money here than abroad, including black money that was once abroad.
So, if this Bill is indeed as ambitious as the Minister says, the
ambition seems to consist of scratching the tip of the iceberg.

The second fatal flaw is that there is no mechanism to actually
retrieve information on the defaulters, which requires agreements with
foreign governments. There are governments with which we have
concluded agreements within the UPA era.  Are there any new
governments that have come on board to give us information? How many
governments are willing to cooperate with us in this effort?

We know that foreign countries are just not waiting to hand over
information to us about Indians holding black money in their
countries. The fact is that their domestic laws and International
Treaty obligations will prevail. For example, the Swiss Government
will not reveal information on Swiss Bank deposits, and cannot reveal
them under their own laws, until we provide the names of individuals
we are investigating, the names of the banks where they have their
money, and evidence of criminality in the acquisition of this money.
The Swiss government has said that they will not support any "fishing
expedition" by the Indian government looking for Indian names in their
banks. The government of India has announced harsh punitive measures
in today's Bill, but how will punitive measures alone promote
compliance when the Government has no way of knowing who has assets
abroad, or of getting information that will inculpate people?

***This is why I joked in Parliament that the Finance Minister, who
once used to enjoy good South Indian food, has given us a medu vada
Bill - a Bill with a big hole in the middle of it*** [emphasis added].
That big hole is the lack of means of obtaining information about
those whom the government actually wants to prosecute. You can
announce threats of jail and hefty fines, but you cannot fine or jail
"persons unknown".

The third flaw is, paradoxically enough, that this Bill gives
unbridled powers to the tax authorities, assessing officers,
Enforcement Directorate, CBDT and others, while overlooking the great
failures of tax administration in our country. The Bill essentially
recreates the Inspector Raj of the pre-liberalisation days. It does so
by giving the taxman judicial powers, powers to scrutinise files for
16 years, levy penalties, make people criminally liable, and more.
This is all the more ironic since this is a government that has
disempowered most of its Ministers and bypassed most bureaucrats
except the ones who are in the PMO. The only people who are gaining
power now in this government are the taxmen.

If these powers are exercised and abused, the Government will drive
people away from India: there is already a surge of inquiries about
becoming NRIs. There are no safeguards for protecting the innocent.
Those who provide inadequate information in good faith will still be
punished. The bigger worry is that this kind of tax tyranny will drive
away businesses as well. It does not square with the government's
vaunted determination to improve India's ease of doing business.

Worse, the Bill completely overlooks the very poor quality of tax
administration in this country. There are real questions about the
integrity of our tax process. There are also capacity issues,
including a large number of vacancies in the Enforcement Directorate.
One concrete example of the system's limitations is that the
Government missed its deadline of 31st March, 2015 for prosecuting
black money holders abroad under the existing Income Tax Act, 1961.
Out of 427 actionable cases in the HSBC list, the Special
Investigation Team has prosecuted only 200 of them. If the Government
does not have the capacity even to go after the names which it already
has, what is it going to do with the ones it doesn't know about under
this new Bill?

The fourth and final flaw is a fundamental one -- this Bill is not
part of an overall strategy. An overall strategy should focus on
controlling the generation of black money, which will need a
comprehensive approach that includes serious tax reforms and
rationalisation; reforming real estate practices (and there are a
whole series of things which need to be done there); improving the
quality of education so that black money does not come into the
education system; tackling black money in politics, which we never
talk about in Parliament, though every MP knows that politics is awash
in black money; and taking action against hawala networks.

No such larger comprehensive strategy has been articulated by the
Government. Instead, it has offered a Bill that, like modern dating,
offers short-term gratification without long-term commitment. This
Bill is an attempt to look tough and to seem to be taking decisive
action, but it is not anchored or integrated into such a sensible
strategy.

We need a comprehensive approach to black money. This isn't it.

(Dr Shashi Tharoor is a two-time MP from Thiruvananthapuram, the
Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs,
the former Union Minister of State for External Affairs and Human
Resource Development and the former UN Under-Secretary-General. He has
written 15 books, including, most recently, India Shastra: Reflections
On the Nation in Our Time.)

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the
personal opinions of the author. The facts and opinions appearing in
the article do not reflect the views of NDTV and NDTV does not assume
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Story First Published: May 13, 2015 12:26 IST
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