In an attempt to bring authenticity to e-mail based communication to taxpayers,
the Finance Ministry has asked Income Tax department officials to mandatorily
mention their email and official phone numbers in such letters and
notices.
An official order, accessed by PTI, in this regard was issued by
the Ministry sometime back on the directions of Revenue Secretary Hasmukh
Adhia.
"Henceforth any notice, letter, communication issued by any
officer under Department of Revenue, including CBDT, its directorates and field
formations to the taxpayers, members of public should invariably contain mention
of email address and office phone numbers, of the officers signing such,
communications, notice, letters for facilitating tax payers' electronic
interface with the department.
"All are requested to kindly ensure that
the above directions are strictly followed," the order said.
A senior
official explained the step had been taken to lend the required "authenticity"
to electronic communications which at times are fraught with the danger of being
fake or an phishing attempt on the taxpayer.
"In case of doubt, the
recipient or taxpayer could check the authenticity of the notice or letter sent
by the Assessing Officer or the IT officer. The attempt is to make
e-comunication by IT department safe, secure and reliable," the official
said.
The department has recently launched a first-ever pilot project to
begin an email based scrutiny assessment of taxpayers in select
cities.
The Central Board of Direct Taxes, the policy-making body of the
IT department, had recently also notified use of emails as the new mode of
communication between the taxman and taxpayers, as part of the government's
e-initiative to reduce human interface and complaints of harassment and
corruption in conducting tax-related jobs.
Henceforth, the taxman can now
send official communication to "email address available in the income-tax return
furnished by the addressee to which the communication relates or the email
address available in the last income tax return furnished by the addressee or in
the case of addressee being a company, email address of the company as available
on the website of ministry of corporate affairs".
The department, in
order to reduce the taxpayers' visit to the IT office, had launched the 'pilot'
project and the first set of e-communications have been decided to be mailed to
100 chosen people each in Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Ahmedabad and Chennai
regions.
The CBDT had recently asked the department to "initiate the
concept of using email for corresponding with taxpayers and sending through
emails the questionnaire, notice etc. at the time of scrutiny proceedings and
getting responses from them."
"This would eliminate the necessity of
visiting the Income Tax offices by the taxpayers, particularly in smaller cases,
involving limited issues and where taxpayer is able to provide details required
by the Assessing Officer (AO) without necessitating his physical presence," the
order had said.
Source:-The Ecomic Times
Updates:
Follow us on WhatsApp, Telegram Channel, Twitter and Facebook for all latest updates
Post a Comment