Thanks to a slowing economy and huge income-tax refunds, net direct tax collections in April stood at Rs 9,590 crore (Rs 95.9 billion), 21.48 per cent lower than Rs 12,214 crore in the same month last year.
Indirect tax collections saw only a meagre 3.5 per cent growth, as mop-up from Customs fell sharply on account of a drop in imports.
At Rs 24,110 crore (Rs 241.1 billion), income-tax refunds given in April this year were 38.43 per cent higher than the Rs 17,416 crore (Rs 174.16 billion) refunded in the same month of 2013-14.
Refunds are usually higher in the first month of a new financial year, as the tax department starts moderating it in the last quarter of a financial year to meet tax targets.
However, in the past two years, net corporation tax collections in the first month were negative, as the tax department cleared the excess backlog of refunds in April.
“Collections are down due to refunds. It also implies that the economic situation has not improved yet,” said a finance ministry official who did not wish to be named.
Initial indicators for industrial growth in April did not seem promising, either. While official data for industrial production are yet to come, HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index shows manufacturing activity in April might have been little changed from that in March.
Also, non-oil, non-gold imports declined 3.9 per cent to $20.5 billion in April, against $21.35 billion in the same month a year earlier, showing industrial sluggishness was still there in the economy.
At Rs 33,700 crore (Rs 337 billion), gross direct tax collections in April (including refunds) were 13.73 per cent higher than the Rs 29,630 crore (Rs 296.3 billion) in the year-ago period.
Gross personal income-tax mop-up rose 19.70 per cent from Rs 17,000 crore (Rs 170 billion) in April 2013-14 to Rs 20,350 crore (Rs 203.5 billion) this year, whereas corporation tax increased marginally from Rs 12,460 crore (Rs 124.6 billion) to Rs 13,200 crore (Rs 132 billion) -- an increase of 5.93