Connect with us

TOP STORIES

CAG audit exposes major financial lapses in J&K, flags crores in doubtful recovery, idle funds | KNO

₹104.51 crore recovery under cloud, ₹85.75 crore locked; report cites wrongful benefits, GST scrutiny delays, poor PSU compliance

Published

on

kno news

Srinagar, Apr 08 (KNO): The Comptroller and Auditor General’s (CAG) Compliance Audit of revenue receipts and Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) in Jammu and Kashmir has flagged deep-rooted systemic failures in financial oversight, exposing significant revenue leakages, weak enforcement under GST, and serious irregularities in public sector operations. The report, accessed by the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), points to a doubtful recovery of ₹104.51 crore, wrongful disbursal of ₹59.21 crore, and blocking of ₹85.75 crore in funds. It also highlights a five-year delay in the implementation of GST scrutiny mechanisms and extremely low compliance in the submission of PSU accounts, raising serious concerns over transparency and fiscal accountability in the Union Territory. According to the audit, there was a delay of over five years in issuing the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for scrutiny of returns for the financial years 2017–18 and 2018–19, which resulted in minimal scrutiny being conducted. The Special Investigation Unit (SIU), tasked with providing inputs for scrutiny and enabling necessary action by the State Taxes Officer (STO), was constituted only in 2022–23. The audit found that intelligence inputs meant to be shared with jurisdictional authorities between 2017–18 and 2020–21 were not forwarded, raising the risk of undetected revenue losses. It noted that minimal scrutiny of returns such as GSTR-3B and GSTR-9 led to mismatches in turnover, tax paid, and ITC going unnoticed. The report also flagged inaction against non-filers, failure to cancel registrations of defaulters, and non-levy of penalties and interest. Additionally, discrepancies were observed between MIS reports and data provided by State Taxes Officers (STOs), indicating gaps in monitoring and enforcement. The audit observed that administrative inaction led to the delayed issuance of the SOP for scrutiny of returns and the late constitution of the internal audit wing. It also noted that key records, including GSTN red-flag reports and year-wise scrutiny details, were not produced to the audit despite repeated requests. The CAG has recommended strengthening scrutiny through risk-based analysis and fixing year-wise targets to address discrepancies highlighted in the audit. As of March 31, 2022, 42 PSUs were under CAG audit in Jammu and Kashmir, including 39 government companies, two statutory corporations, and one government-controlled entity. Six PSUs were inactive, with investments of ₹57.57 crore and outstanding loans of ₹0.83 crore. Only three out of 34 government companies submitted their accounts for 2021–22 within the stipulated timeline, while accounts of key entities like J&K Road Transport Corporation and J&K Financial Corporation remained pending. The audit also flagged irregularities in the interest subvention scheme approved in October 2020, noting that ₹85.75 crore remained unutilised for nearly a year. Ineligible benefits amounting to ₹59.21 crore were extended to over 39,000 accounts, including those not covered under the scheme. Further, ₹104.51 crore became doubtful due to irregular credit sanctioning by J&K Bank Limited, while failure to operationalise J&K Asset Reconstruction Limited led to wasteful expenditure of ₹82.18 lakh. Additionally, improper parking of surplus funds caused a loss of ₹2.65 crore to J&K IT Infrastructure Development Private Limited. The audit also found that non-deposit of advance tax on taxable income by Jammu and Kashmir State Power Development Corporation Limited during the financial years 2015–16, 2017–18, and 2019–20, in violation of provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961, led to an avoidable interest burden of ₹6.88 crore. Similarly, the failure of Jammu and Kashmir Projects Construction Corporation Limited to deposit advance tax on time for the financial year 2017–18 resulted in additional avoidable interest of ₹0.32 crore—(KNO)

Trending

TOP STORIES ago

LG Sinha invokes zero tolerance policy, terminates 2 more govt employees over terror links, dismissals reach 90 | KNO

TOP STORIES ago

Intermittent snowfall, rain deepen chill across J&K | KNO

TOP STORIES ago

CM Omar bats for promoting heritage tourism | KNO

TOP STORIES ago

J&K leaders welcome Iran-US ceasefire, call for dialogue | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Traffic diversion on Ali-Jan Road for sewerage work: SSP Bhat | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Pattan traffic snarls set to end, bypass likely before deadline: DC Baramulla | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Baramulla MC refutes illegal construction claims, warns of legal action | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

‘Avoid travel, don’t risk lives’: DIG Mughal tells people amid landslides, highway closure | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Govt mulls inclusion of AI in school curriculum | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

KCC&I welcomes US-Iran ceasefire, hopes for regional economic stability | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

CAG audit exposes major financial lapses in J&K, flags crores in doubtful recovery, idle funds | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Continued dumping plagues Poonch river; NGT deadline missed | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Wild tulips paint Pampore Karewas in spring hues, draw surge of tourists | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Over 1400 teaching posts vacant in Kupwara | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

IED ‘meant to target’ security forces defused in Shopian: Officials | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

Police crack down on unauthorised service providers in Sonamarg | KNO

TOP STORIES1 hours ago

CM Omar calls for collective action as key to social transformation | KNO

Copyright © 2021