Tsunami of Input Tax Credit Scams coming
The MOS finance made a reference to ‘briefcase companies’ who sell goods enabling the recipient to take input tax credit and vanish after 2 to 3 months. He observed that if such companies were not traceable, then the recipient who had used the input tax credit would be liable to pay the tax even though he might have paid the tax to the seller.
A case in the scrap iron and steel business busted in Bangalore in November 2018 illustrated that the modus operandi where a single person registered 20 fake companies on the GST network.“Their modus operandi involved creating/floating fake companies at fake/wrong addresses, issuing fake GST invoices and generating fake e-way bills, with fake/wrong vehicle registration details without supply of any goods. The fake companies are floated with the intention to fraudulently pass on input tax credit by issuing fake invoices without any supply of goods causing loss of exchequer”
In this single case fake invoices worth Rs 1,200 crore for scrap iron and steel had been generated to avoid GST liability of Rs 200 crores. This is just one of the many instances of the input tax credit scam. more