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CBIC member John Joseph said alike small businesses who are making mistakes while filing GST returns, multinationals and big corporates too have slip-ups.
“If you look at the way tax revenues are paid, it gives an alarming picture. We have registration of more than 1 crore businesses. But if you look at where the tax is coming from, it is less than 1 lakh people paying 80 per cent of the tax, one does not know what is happening in the system, it is an important thing to study,” Joseph said at an Assocham event here.
Joseph, who is also the Director General of Goods and Services Tax Intelligence (DG GSTI), said the analysis of composition dealers data shows that most of them have an annual turnover of Rs 5 lakh. “This shows that a lot of compliance is required.”
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Joseph said the investigation has revealed that a modus operandi is being followed whereby fake invoices are being generated for goods which have not been supplied at all.
Based on these invoices, some entities are claiming input tax credit. Besides, without actually exporting goods, some entities are claiming GST refunds based on fake invoices.
“Government revenue is being taken away. We in a short period of 1-2 months have detected over Rs 2,000 crore evasion which could be only the tip of the iceberg,” Joseph said, adding the GST Intelligence wing will step up efforts in the days ahead.