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Clause 390 Deduction or collection at source and advance payment.
The Indian income tax regime has consistently evolved to keep pace with the complexities of modern commerce and the imperative of efficient tax administration. The proposed Income Tax Bill, 2025, reflects a comprehensive overhaul of the existing framework, seeking to rationalize, simplify, and modernize tax collection and compliance mechanisms. Clause 390, and in particular sub-clause (4), is central to this objective, as it deals with the modalities and legal effect of various modes of tax collection, namely deduction or collection at source, advance payment, and other specified payments.
Section 202 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, currently governs the relationship between tax deduction at source (TDS) and other modes of tax recovery, establishing that TDS is not the exclusive method and does not preclude recourse to other methods. This commentary undertakes a detailed analysis of Clause 390(4) of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, scrutinizing its language, legislative intent, and practical implications, and juxtaposes it with the current statutory position u/s 202. The analysis is structured to provide clarity on the continuities, departures, and innovations introduced by the new Bill, with a focus on legal interpretation, compliance, and policy rationale.
The primary objective of Clause 390(4) is to clarify the legal status of tax payments made by way of deduction or collection at source, advance payment, or other specified means. The provision is designed to ensure that these mechanisms operate in addition to, and not to the exclusion of, other statutory modes of tax collection or recovery. This reflects a legislative intent to equip tax authorities with multiple, concurrent avenues for the discharge and enforcement of tax liabilities, thereby safeguarding the interests of the revenue and minimizing the risk of tax evasion or default.
Section 202 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, serves a similar purpose in the existing regime. It explicitly states that the power to recover tax by deduction at source is "without prejudice to any other mode of recovery." The historical context of this provision lies in the need to avoid any legal ambiguity that might arise if taxpayers or deductors were to contend that deduction at source is a bar to subsequent recovery proceedings by the tax department. Over the years, amendments to Section 202 have kept pace with the expansion of TDS provisions across a wide array of payments and transactions.
Clause 390(4) of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, reads as follows:
The payment of tax referred to in sub-section (1) shall be in addition to any other mode of tax collection to discharge the liability in respect of income assessed for a tax year.
This sub-clause, though succinct, is loaded with legal and administrative import. Its analysis requires an examination of the following elements:
While the language of Clause 390(4) is broadly clear, certain interpretational issues could arise:
The practical effect of Clause 390(4) is to reinforce the multi-layered approach to tax collection. For stakeholders, this means:
Section 202 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, states:
The power to recover tax by deduction under the foregoing provisions of this Chapter shall be without prejudice to any other mode of recovery.
Clause 390(4) of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, states:
The payment of tax referred to in sub-section (1) shall be in addition to any other mode of tax collection to discharge the liability in respect of income assessed for a tax year.
Both provisions emphasize the non-exclusivity of deduction at source or similar mechanisms, but Clause 390(4) is broader in scope and more explicit in its reference to all modes of payment under Clause 390(1), i.e., deduction or collection at source, advance payment, and payment u/s 392(2)(a).
Both provisions are designed to avoid conflict or overlap by clarifying that the modes of payment or recovery are cumulative, not alternative. However, Clause 390(4) does a better job of integrating the various mechanisms into a unified statutory scheme, reducing the risk of interpretational gaps.
| Aspect | Section 202 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 | Clause 390(4) of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Deduction at source only | Deduction, collection at source, advance payment, and other payments |
| Language | "Without prejudice to any other mode of recovery" | "In addition to any other mode of tax collection" |
| Coverage | Limited to TDS provisions in Chapter XVII-B | All modes of payment under Clause 390(1) |
| Practical Effect | Allows revenue to pursue other recovery options despite TDS | Allows revenue to pursue all collection options despite TDS, TCS, advance tax, or other payments |
| Policy Rationale | Prevent exclusivity of TDS as recovery mechanism | Prevent exclusivity of any single payment mode; modernize and broaden recovery framework |
Clause 390(4) of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, represents a significant step forward in the rationalization and modernization of tax collection law in India. By explicitly stating that all primary modes of tax payment-deduction or collection at source, advance payment, and specified payments-are "in addition to any other mode of tax collection," the provision ensures that tax authorities retain a full arsenal of recovery tools to secure the revenue due. The provision also reinforces the principle that anticipatory payments are provisional and subject to reconciliation upon assessment.
Compared to Section 202 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, Clause 390(4) is broader, more integrated, and better aligned with the realities of contemporary tax administration. It reduces the scope for legal ambiguity, strengthens compliance, and protects the revenue base without compromising taxpayer rights to credit or refund. The provision is thus a model of legislative clarity and administrative pragmatism, and its adoption is likely to enhance the efficiency and robustness of the Indian tax system.
Full Text:
Clause 390 Deduction or collection at source and advance payment.
Non-exclusivity of source-based tax collection allows authorities to pursue additional recovery methods when payments are provisional. Clause 390(4) states that taxes paid by deduction or collection at source, advance payments and specified payments operate in addition to any other mode of tax collection to discharge the liability for income assessed for a tax year, preserving the tax authority's power to pursue alternative recovery measures where such anticipatory payments are provisional, insufficient, or incorrect while allowing credit or refund for any excess.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.