Deduction From Salary Under The Head Salary
Deduction From Salary Under The Head Salary
Deduction From Salary Under The Head Salary
Principles of taxation
project
TOPIC deduction from salary under
the head salaries
PROJECT SUBMITTED TO
BY
PROJECT SUBMITTED
RISHABH
SEMESTER - V
ROLL NO 129
SEC - A
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Acknowledgments................................................3
Introduction...........................................................4
Objective.................................................................5
Research Methodology.........................................5
Conclusion.................................................................20
Bibliography...............................................................21
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I have made this project work, and on the way of completing it, I have learned a lot of
things for which I am thankful to Mr. Rana Navneet Roy, Assistant professor, HNLU,
Raipur, and my guide, who gave me the opportunity to do this project work and guided me
all the way. I would also like to thank my friends, and colleagues, for their opinions,
suggestions and critical analysis, which has helped me to improve this project. I also thank
the HNLU library and the people working there. Their silent work is the reason behind the
completion of this project.
I thank God, He has been very generous on me, to have kept me in good health and make
the conditions favourable for me to complete this work in time.
Lastly, I thank my parents. Without their continuous support and belief in me, I would
never have been able to make this project.
- rishabh bhargav
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INTRODUCTION
Salary is typically determined by comparing market pay rates for people performing similar
work in similar industries in the same region. Salary is also determined by levelling the pay
rates and salary ranges established by an individual employer. Salary is also affected by the
number of people available to perform the specific job in the employer's employment locale.
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OBJECTIVES
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
The research is based on secondary sources. Literature Books from the universitys library
have been used. Articles and reports from different websites have been used in order to get
comprehensive data on the subject Footnotes have been provided wherever needed, to
acknowledge the source.
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SCOPE OF STUDY
My scope of study revolves around salary income and its deductions from head salary
Characteristics of Salary:
1. The relationship of payer and payee must be of employer and employee for an income
to be categorized as salary income. For example: Salary income of a Member of
Parliament cannot be specified as salary, since it is received from Government of
India which is not his employer.
2. The Act makes
salary is paid for non-manual work and wages are paid for manual work.
3. Salary received
in this head.
4. Salary is taxable either
earlier.
i) Due basis - when it is earned even if it is not received in the previous
year.
ii) Receipt basis - when it is received even if it is not earned in the previous
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year.
iii) Arrears of salary- which were not due and received earlier are taxable when due or
received, whichever is earlier.
5. Compulsory deduction
fund, deduction on account of medical scheme or staff welfare scheme etc. are examples of
instances of application of income. In these cases, for computing total income, these
deductions have to be added back.
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difference between salary and wages. Both are compensation for work done or
services rendered, though ordinarily salary is paid in connection with services of
non-manual type of work, while wages are paid in connection with manual services
Gestetner Duplicators (P.) Ltd. v. CIT2
3. Salary from more than one source - If an individual receives salary from
more than one employer during the same previous year (maybe due to change of
employment or due to employment with more than one employer simultaneously),
salary from each source is taxable under the head Salaries. For instance, if a clerk
works with two employers on part-time basis, salary from both the employers will be
chargeable to tax under the head "Salaries".
4. Salary from former employer, present employer or prospective
employer - Remuneration received (or due) during the previous year is chargeable
to tax under the head Salaries irrespective of whether it is received from a former,
present or prospective employer.
5. Salary income must be real and not fictitious - Amount taxable under the
head Salaries is real salary and not fictitious salary. There should be an intention to
pay and receive salary. Where, for example, there was, merely in order to comply
with the requirement of the Board of Education Rules, an agreement between the
assessee (a school teacher) and the governing body of the school granting a certain
salary to the assessee and simultaneously there was another agreement by which an
identical sum was to be returned by the assessee to the governing body as donation,
it was held that there was in reality no agreement to pay and receive salaryReadex.
Brearley3. Likewise, if there is no intention to render any service and agreement is
made to make payment on paper in order to claim the same as business deduction,
the amount received by the so-called employee is not chargeable as salary.
6.
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his taxable income. Thus, tax is not payable in respect of salary surrendered, which
can be basic salary as well as different allowances. Benefit of tax exemption in
respect of salary surrendered is available to all employees whether they are employed
in private sector or public sector. In CITv. Raghunath Murti, the assessee-managing
director revised return because he had to refund certain sum to his employer-company
as the same was found in excess of limits prescribed in the Companies Act, 1956. The
Delhi High Court held that as the said refund was neither voluntary nor was it for any
extraneous consideration, the same could not be held to be the assessees income and,
therefore, was not assessable.
7. Voluntary payments - Salary, perquisite or allowance may come as a gift to an
employee and yet it would be taxable. The Act does not make any distinction between
gratuitous payment and contractual payment
1. BASIC SALARY
All employees are entitled to a basic salary which is fixed as per their respective terms of
employment either as a fixed amount or at a graded system of salary. Under this graded
system, apart from the basic salary at which the employee will start, annual increments to
be given to the employee are pre fixed in the grade. For example, if a person is employed
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on 1st May, 2004 in the grade of 12000 - 300 - 15000, this means that he will start at a
basic salary of Rs.12000 from 1st May, 2004. He will get an annual increment of Rs.300
w.e.f. 1st May, 2005 and onwards every year on the same date till his basic salary reaches
Rs.15, 000. No further increment is given thereafter till he is promoted and placed in other
grade.
I.
This category includes all the allowances, which are fully taxable. So, if an allowance is not
partially exempt or fully exempt, it gets included in this category. The main allowances under
this category are enumerated below:
(i) Dearness Allowance and Dearness Pay
As is clear by its name, this allowance is paid to compensate the employee against the rise in
price level in the economy. Although it is a compensatory allowance against high prices, the
whole of it is taxable. When a part of Dearness Allowance is converted into Dearness Pay, it
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becomes part of basic salary for the grant of retirement benefits and is assumed to be given
under the terms of employment.
(ii) City Compensatory Allowance
This allowance is paid to employees who are posted in big cities. The purpose is to
compensate the high cost of living in cities like Delhi, Mumbai etc. However, it is fully
taxable.
etc.) who are in government service and are banned from doing private practice. It is to
compensate them for this ban. It is fully taxable.
(v) Warden or Proctor Allowance
These allowances are given in educational institutions for working as a Warden of the hostel
or as a Proctor in the institution. They are fully taxable.
(vi)Overtime Allowance
When an employee works for extra hours over and above his normal hours of duty, he is
given overtime allowance as extra wages. It is fully taxable.
(vii)
Medical allowance is fully taxable even if some expenditure has actually been incurred for
medical treatment of employee or family.
(viii)
Other allowances
There may be several other allowances like family allowance, project allowance, marriage
allowance, education allowance, and holiday allowance etc. which are not covered under
specifically exempt category, so are fully taxable.
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This category includes allowances which are exempt upto certain limit. For certain
allowances, exemption is dependent on amount of allowance spent for the purpose for which
it was received and for other allowances, there is a fixed limit of exemption
(i) House Rent Allowance (H.R.A.)
Certain allowances are given to the employees to meet expenses incurred exclusively in
performance of official duties and hence are exempt to the extent actually incurred for the
purpose for which it is given. These include travelling allowance, daily allowance,
conveyance allowance, helper allowance, research allowance and uniform allowance.
(iii)Special Allowances to meet personal expenses
There are certain allowances given to the employees for specific personal purposes and the
amount of exemption is fixed i.e. not dependent on actual expenditure incurred in this regard.
These allowances include:
a) Children Education Allowance
This allowance is exempt to the extent of Rs.100 per month per child for maximum of 2
children (grand children are not considered).
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b) Transport Allowance
This allowance is generally given to government employees to compensate the cost incurred
in commuting between place of residence and place of work. An amount uptoRs.800 per
month paid is exempt. However, in case of blind and orthopedically handicapped persons, it
is exempt up to Rs. 1600p.m.
III.
This allowance is usually paid by the government to its employees being Indian
citizen posted out of India for rendering services abroad. It is fully exempt from tax.
(ii) Allowance to High Court and Supreme Court Judges of whatever nature are
exempt from tax.
(iii)
Allowances from UNO organization to its employees are fully exempt
from tax.
The income chargeable under the head Salaries" is computed after making the following
deductions:
a. standard deduction
b. entertainment allowance and
c. professional tax
1. Standard deduction [Sec. 16(i)] - Standard deduction is now not available.
2. Entertainment allowance [Sec. 16(ii)] - Entertainment allowance is first included in
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income under the head "Salaries and thereafter a deduction is given on the basis
enumerated in the following paragraph:
In the case of a Government employee (ie, a Central Government or a State
Government employee), the least of: (a) Rs. 5,000; (b) 20 per cent of salary; or (c)
amount of entertainment allowance granted during the previous year, is deductible.
In order to determine the amount of entertainment allowance, deductible from salary, the
following points need consideration:
1. For this purpose salary" excludes any allowance, benefit or other perquisites.
2. Amount actually expended towards entertainment out of entertainment allowance
received is not taken into consideration. Deduction is granted according to the
aforesaid rules, even if the amount received as entertainment allowance is not
proved to have been spentCIT v. Kamla Devi4
3. Professional tax or tax on employment [Sec. 16(iii)]-Professional tax or tax on
employment levied by a State under article 276 of the Constitution is allowed as deduction.
The following points should be kept in view:
1. Deduction is available only in the year in which professional tax is paid.
2. If the professional tax is paid by the employer on behalf of an employee, it is first
included in the salary of the employee as a "perquisite" (since it is an obligation of
the employee discharged by the employer, it is taxable) and then the same amount is
allowed as deduction on account of professional tax" from gross salary.
3. There is no monetary ceiling under the Income-tax Act (under article 276 of the
Constituting State government cannot impose more than Rs. 2,500 per annum as
professional tax). Under the Income-tax Act, whatever professional tax is paid
during the previous year is deductible. Suppose X, posted in Hyderabad, is
required to pay Rs. 2,000 every year as professional tax. On May 31, 2012, he pays
Rs. 4,000 on account of professional tax (ie. Rs. 2,000 for the year 2011 -12 and
Rs. 2,000 for the year 2012-13). In this case, Rs. 4,000 is deductible for the
previous year 2012-13 (it is incorrect to state that in such a case only Rs. 2,500 is
deductible).
(i)
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Section 80C:
This section has been introduced by the Finance Act 2005. Broadly speaking, this section
provides
deduction
from
total
income
in
respect
of
various
investments/
expenditures/payments in respect of which tax rebate u/s 88 was earlier available. The total
deduction under this section (along with section 80CCC and 80CCD) is limited to Rs. 1 lakh
only (proposed to be increased to Rs. 1.50 lacs from 01.04.2014).
Life Insurance Premium For individual, policy must be in self or spouse's or any
child's name. For HUF, it may be on life of any member of HUF.
Sum paid under contract for deferred annuity For individual, on life of self, spouse or
any child.
Sum deducted from salary payable to Govt. Servant for securing deferred annuity for
self-spouse or child Payment limited to 20% of salary.
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Contribution to PPF For individual can be in the name of self/spouse, any child & for
HUF, it can be in the name of any member of the family.
Subscription to any notified savings certificate, Unit Linked Savings certificates. e.g.
NSC VIII issue.
Contribution to Unit Linked Insurance Plan of LIC Mutual Fund e.g. Dhanrakhsa
1989
Certain payment made by way of instalment or part payment of loan taken for
purchase/construction
of
residential
house
property.
Condition has been laid that in case the property is transferred before the expiry of 5 years
from the end of the financial year in which possession of such property is obtained by him,
the aggregate amount of deduction of income so allowed for various years shall be liable to
tax in that year.
Subscription to equity shares/ debentures forming part of any approved eligible issue
of capital made by a public company or public financial institutions.
Tuition fees paid at the time of admission or otherwise to any school, college,
university or other educational institution situated within India for the purpose of full time
education of any two children. Available in respect of any two children
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CONCLUSION
Tax deductions are one of the few tax topics that generate some excitement. While nobody
likes to pay taxes, everybody loves to use deductions to lower their taxes. To put it plainly, a
tax deduction lowers your taxable income, which therefore lowers your tax liability. Some
people mistakenly think a tax deduction is a direct reduction of taxes owed. That is actually a
tax credit, which does directly reduce the amount of taxes owed instead of simply reducing
your taxable income.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS REFERRED
1. Ahuja Girish and Ravi Gupta (2006), Systematic Approach to Income Tax and Sales
WEBSITES
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_tax_in_India#Permissible_ded
uctions_from_Gross_Total_Income
2. http://www.slideshare.net/sanjaySDessai/permissible-deductionsfrom-gross-total-income-under-section-80-of-income-tax-act-1961
3. http://www.caclubindia.com/articles/section-80c-deduction-asper-income-tax-act-21161.asp#.U_7wKfmSwcY
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