Your insurance payout will now come after a tax cut!
*Chennai, Oct 19, 2014, (IANS):*
[image: In a quiet move, the impact of which is being felt only now, the
statute books have been amended to deduct tax at source on some insurance
payouts, which could particularly affect people above45 and those with
single-premium policies. PTI file photo]




*In a quiet move, the impact of which is being felt only now,  the statute
books have been amended to deduct tax at source on some insurance payouts,
which could particularly affect people above45 and those with
single-premium policies.This, by way of a new section -- 194DA -- in the
Income Tax Act, 1961, that took effect Oct 1, and surprised many
policy-holders who got to know of it after they received a communique from
their insurance companies.   Many more are still unaware.*



























*"Section 194D envisages deduction of tax at source on the life insurance
policy payouts which are not exempt under Section 10(10D)," Vibha Padalkar,
executive director and chief financial officer of HDFC Standard Life
Insurance, told IANS.Under this section, life insurance companies have to
deduct a two-percent tax at source on aggregate payouts exceeding
Rs.100,000 during a financial year under life policies. In case where PAN
card details are not   available, the deduction shall be 20 percent.For the
record, Section 10(10D) of the Income Tax Act exempts any sum received
under an insurance policy that is paid from April 1, 2012, if the premium
for any of the years during the currency of the policy is within 10
percent of the actual sum assured.For policies taken between April 1, 2003,
to March 31, 2012, the condition was that the premium shall not exceed 20
percent of the actual capital sum assured. The clauses were not applicable
if the amount  received  was on account of the death of an insured."The
actual capital sum assured excludes the value of any premium agreed to be
returned, as also benefit by way of bonus or otherwise that is over and
above the policy amount," said C.L. Baradhwaj, senior vice   president,
Bharti Axa Life Insurance told IANS.While life insurers try to ensure that
the premium amount is compliant with the Income Tax Act at the
product-design stage itself, there are some set of policyholders who could
be affected by the new provisions,   Baradhwaj said."All single-premium
policies would be the immediate casualty, as the premia paid in one
instalment would generally exceed 10 percent of the sum assured," he
said.He said it is possible that people could be paying premia higher than
the 10-20 percent limit set by the new provisions on account of their
personal health, as also many other reasons. In such cases, too, the TDS
liability  could arise."It is important to note that a person aged, say, 50
years, pays a higher premium for the same sum assured when compared to a
person who is 35 years old. Higher the age, higher risk and higher the
premium,"   Baradhwaj added.Industry officials also maintain that life
insurance companies have been asked to make a TDS deduction under policies
that are deviant of Section 10(10D), since some people were not reporting
the same in their tax   returns.According to Baradhwaj, if the condition of
10-20 percent is not satisfied, all benefits payable -- pertaining to the
maturity, survival, or surrender -- under a life insurance policy,
excluding the death benefits, shall be liable   for TDS."Policy loan is not
a benefit. It's a repayable obligation. Hence it is not taxable."A
marketing official of the state-run Life Insurance Corporation of India
told IANS that policyholders in rural and small towns would be severely
affected by the new provisions, as they might not have PAN cards.At the
same time conflicting views are being expressed on pension polices.
According to one view, pension policies are outside the newly introduced
section 194DA of the Income Tax Act as they are outside the scope of
Section 10(10D).The argument: Pension policies do not have any death
benefit like ULIP Pension Policies, or have only miniscule death benefits
like in the current regime pension schemes, so they do not qualify as a
pure life insurance   policy.*










*But a Supreme Court advocate and expert in insurance and company laws, D.
Varadarajan, differs, raising a fundamental question: "How do life
insurance companies sell pension policies if they are not treated as life
 insurance policies?""The regulator's licence allows insurance companies to
only deal with the life insurance business. Hence it will be incongruous
with the Insurance Act to keep pension policies outside the ambit of life
insurance policy,"   Varadarajan told IANS.He said pension policy is also a
life insurance policy, as it covers the risk of living longer, as opposed
to the conventional life insurance policies which cover the risk of dying
early.Meanwhile, industry officials agree that life insurers have to
communicate with their policyholders about the impact  of the new section
of the Income Tax Act."It's also important to create awareness among the
sales force on the need to tell their customers on the need for proper
disclosures to the authorities so that insurance firms can avoid
unnecessary policy cancellation   requests later," Baradhwaj said."Software
systems also need upgrade to ensure compliance with the new requirements."*


*K.Raman*

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