India's uphill battle against black money in real estate

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Agencies: Ulwe (Mumbai), Nov 21 2012, 12:12 IST
Indian economy.jpg
Ulwe, a village of dusty, uneven streets on the outskirts of Mumbai, lacks basic amenities like water supply and electricity, but a two-bedroom, 1,000 sq ft house costs about 5 million rupees ($91,000), beyond the reach of many middle-class Indians.

According to prospective buyers, many developers will demand up to 30 percent of that price in cash, a small slice of the ubiquitous, unaccounted black money that costs India's straitened exchequer billions of dollars in lost taxable income.

Legislation that would bring more transparency to the industry will be considered during the winter session of India's parliament, which starts on Thursday.

However, investors, tax officials and bankers Reuters spoke with were sceptical the law would stamp out illegal practices they say are closely entwined with politics.

Four out of 10 developers were ready to do it in full white and six were asking for a black component, said 35-year-old Umesh Kolhapure, who was looking for a three-bedroom house around Ulwe, near the proposed site of a new international airport serving the country's financial capital.

Recent high-profile scandals in India's coal and telecoms sectors involving large corporate houses and politicians have rattled investors in Asia's third-largest economy, where undeclared wealth has long been rampant.

Real estate accounts for a large share of illicit transactions, thanks to lax regulation and the numerous approvals needed for projects, making many ordinary people party to corruption and pricing some of the emerging middle class out of the market.

That has prompted the newly-appointed housing minister, Ajay Maken, to push a real estate

... contd.

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Reader's Comments (1)| Post a Comment

Totally false claim

R.Ramachandran | 21-Nov-2012Reply | Forward
It is completely wrong to state that getting approvals pushes the cost. On the contrary, if the builders submit the plan according to the permissible limits of construction, and if they do not get the approval in time, they can very well approach legal fora for remedy. It is only due the builders trying to build beyond the permissible limits, that they have to shell out extra money to the babus. Even if a single window clearance system comes, then also so long as the builders would not confine to the permissible limits, the need to grease the palms will not be eliminated. On the contrary, the same amount of bribe may have to be paid, not at several places, but all at roof/window! The crux of the matter is the Government / politicians do not want to bell the cat! There are ample provisions in the Income Tax Act, (Chapter-XX-C - providing for purchase by Central Govt. of immovable properties in certain cases of transfer) but under disuse.

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