The financial and taxation frauds are the most dreaded virus for any economic growth of any country. Whether the guilty gets the required punishment always remain a question. The best way to minimise such instances is to improve the system and internal controls. Did our government took any such steps to put the house in order to prevent further leakages? The article attempts to answer such questions.
Currently, transactions under the Scheme are being permitted by Authorised Dealer (AD) banks based on the declaration made by the remitter. As such, it is difficult for the AD banks to monitor/ensure that a remitter has not breached the prescribed limit by approaching multiple AD banks. With the objective of improved monitoring and ensuring compliance with the LRS ceilings, it has been decided by RBI to put in place a system for daily reporting of individual transactions by banks. This will, inter alia, enable the AD Banks to view the remittances already sent by an individual before allowing further remittance thus obviating the possibility of a remitter breaching the LRS limit by approaching multiple AD banks. This in turn will result better control over money flowing from India under LRS scheme.
Prior to implementation of SMF, a window for Equity Master Form (EMF) will be provided to entities having foreign investment, to input the data on total foreign investment received from 28.06.2018 to 12.07.2018. The entities skipping this window will be treated as non-compliant under FEMA, 1999 and will not be able to further foreign investments. Going forward, SMF will subsume all the forms like FC-GPR, FC-TRS, LLP-I & II. This integration will result into better analytics abilities with the regulator and will simplify the reporting procedure.
In terms of the said Rules, companies are restricted from having more than two layers of subsidiaries except one layer of wholly owned subsidiary(ies) which has been excluded from such a limit. Further, companies have been allowed to acquire (which shall include a new incorporation too) a company incorporated outside India with subsidiaries beyond two layers as per the laws of such country.
The companies were required to comply to these rules and make disclosures in Form CRL-1 by Feb ā18 and not to increase the number of layers. Recently, MCA has come hard for the compliance and āshow cause noticesā have been issued to errant companies.
The Rules further provide that a contravention shall attract punishment on the company and every officer of the company who is in default by way of fine, which may extend to ten thousand rupees and where the contravention is a continuing one, with a further fine which may extend to one thousand rupees for every day after the first during which such contravention continues.
This is being perceived as right tool to curb ābenamiā and shareholding jargon created to avoid disclosure of ultimate beneficial owner (UBO).
All these recent developments in turn means, Indian regulatory authorities now or will have robust information system in place, wherein susceptible transactions can be better traced. We believe the steps laid out are in right direction and the actions will have good results in times to come.
Saurabh Gupta is a practicing Chartered Accountant having qualified post qualification course in āMaster in Business Financeā from ICAI.Ā He has over 14 years of experience in finance and accounts domain.