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India celebrates 150 years of income tax
from Today
New Delhi, July 24, 2010
India Saturday kicks off celebrations
to mark 150 years of its Income Tax Department since British
rule -- a period that saw the mop-up grow from mere Rs.1.33
crore in 1860-61 to around Rs.380,000 crore (nearly $85
billion) last fiscal.
The relevant bill to set up the department was moved July 24,
1860 by the first member-finance of the Council of India James
Wilson, who also founded The Economist magazine and the
Standard Chartered Bank.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee will kick off the
celebrations here by releasing a new charter for the income
tax department to seeks to meet the aspirations of the people
of India as also the third volume of a book titled "Let Us
Share".
A short documentary film on the journey of the 150-year-old
department, anchored by actor Om Puri, will also be screened
at the celebrations organised at the auditorium of the
Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Ficci).
This apart, an exhibition of paintings has also been organised
to express the creative outpouring by officers of the
department, and some celeated artists, at the AIFACS hall here
July 25-30.
Several eminent artists like Dhiraj Chowdhury, Ganesh Haloi,
Prakash Karmakar, Jogen Choudhury, Wasim Kapoor and Sunil Das
joined some talanted artists in the department, including
Bratati Mukherjee and Prasanna Kumar Dash, to showcase some 40
paintings.
According to information available in various archives, Wilson
was specifically sent to India to set up its tax structure
during the British rule, as also to introduce a new paper
currency and establish a new financial system after the revolt
of 1857.
He, incidentally, died a few days after the Council gave its
nod for the new bill to set up the tax department. Often
referred to as the forefather of India's modern tax system
system, he rests at a cemetery at Mullick Bazar in Kolkata.
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