Affiliates

All these incomes are tax-free for FY 2007-08

Here are some of the important items of income, which are fully exempt from income tax and which can be utilised by a resident individual Indian assessee for the purpose of tax planning.

1. Agricultural income

Under the provisions of Section 10(1) of the Income Tax Act, agricultural income is fully exempt from income tax. However, for individuals or HUFs when agricultural income is in excess of Rs 5,000, it is aggregated with the total income for the purposes of computing tax on the total income in a manner which results into "no" tax on agricultural income but an increased income tax on the other income.

Agricultural income which fulfils the above conditions is completely exempt from tax. The manner of calculating tax on total income and agricultural income, is explained in Illustration.


Illustration

For the assessment year 2008-09 an individual has a total income from trading in cloth amounting to Rs 111,000 besides, he has earned Rs 40,000 as income from agriculture.

The income tax payable by him will be computed as under:

  • On the first Rs 110,000 of taxable non-agricultural income: Nil
  • On the next Rs 40,000 of agricultural income (falling under 10% slab): Nil
  • On the next Rs 1,000 of taxable non-agricultural income @ 20%: Rs 200
  • IT on aggregated income of Rs 111,000 + Rs 40,000 = Rs 151,000: Rs 200

2. Receipts from HUF

Any sum received by an individual as a member of a Hindu Undivided Family, where the said sum has been paid out of the income of the family, or, in the case of an impartible estate, where such sum has been paid out of the income of the estate belonging to the family, is completely exempt from income tax in the hands of an individual member of the family under Section 10(2).

3. Share from a partnership firm

Under the provisions of Section 10(2A), in the case of a person being a partner of a firm which is separately assessed as such, his share in the total income of the firm is completely exempt from income tax since AY 1993-94.

For this purpose, the share of a partner in the total income of a firm separately assessed as such would be an amount which bears to the total income of the firm the same share as the amount of the share in the profits of the firm in accordance with the partnership deed bears to such profits.

4. Allowance for foreign service

Any allowances or perquisites paid or allowed as such outside India by the government to a citizen of India, rendering service outside India, are completely exempt from tax under Section 10(7). This provision can be taken advantage of by the citizens of India who are in government service so that they can accumulate tax-free perquisites and allowances received outside India.

5. Gratuities

Under the provisions of Section 10(10) of the IT Act, any death-cum-retirement gratuity of a government servant is completely exempt from income tax. However, in respect of private sector employees gratuity received on retirement or on becoming incapacitated or on termination or any gratuity received by his widow, children or dependants on his death is exempt subject to certain conditions.

The maximum amount of exemption is Rs 350,000. Of course, this is further subject to certain other limits like the one half-month's salary for each year of completed service, calculated on the basis of average salary for the 10 months immediately preceding the year in which the gratuity is paid or 20 months' salary as calculated. Thus, the least of these items is exempt from income tax under Section 10(10).

6. Commutation of pension

The entire amount of any payment in commutation of pension by a government servant or any payment in commutation of pension from LIC pension fund is exempt from income tax under Section 10(10A) of IT Act.

However, in respect of private sector employees, only the following amount of commuted pension is exempt, namely: (a) Where the employee received any gratuity, the commuted value of one-third of the pension which he is normally entitled to receive; and (b) In any other case, the commuted value of half of such pension.

It may be noted here that the monthly pension receivable by a pensioner is liable to full income tax like any other item of salary or income and no standard deduction is now available in respect of pension received by a tax payer.

7. Leave salary of central government employees

Under Section 10(10AA) the maximum amount receivable by the employees of central government as cash equivalent to the leave salary in respect of earned leave at their credit up to 10 months' leave at the time of their retirement, whether on superannuation or otherwise, would be Rs 300,000.

8. Voluntary retirement or separation payment

Under the provisions of Section 10(10C), any amount received by an employee of a public sector company or of any other company or of a local authority or a statutory authority or a cooperative society or university or IIT or IIM at the time of his voluntary retirement (VR) or voluntary separation in accordance with any scheme or schemes of VR as per Rule 2BA, is completely exempt from tax. The maximum amount of money received at such VR which is so exempt is Rs 5 lakh (Rs 500,000).

9. Life insurance receipts

Under Section 10(10D), any sum received under a Life Insurance Policy (LIP), including the sum allocated by way of bonus on such policy, other than u/s 80DDA or under a Keyman Insurance Policy, or under an insurance policy issued on or after 1.4.2003 (April 1, 2003) in respect of which the premium payable for any of the years during the term of the policy exceeds 20% of the actual capital sum assured, is fully exempt from tax.

However, all moneys received on death of the insured are fully exempt from tax. Thus, generally moneys received from life insurance policies whether from the Life Insurance Corporation or any other private insurance company would be exempt from income tax.

10. Payment received from provident funds

Under the provisions of Sections 10(11), (12) and (13) any payment from a government or recognised provident fund (PF) or approved superannuation fund, or PPF is exempt from income tax.

11. Certain types of interest payment

There are certain types of interest payments which are fully exempt from income tax u/s 10(15). These are described below:

(i) Income by way of interest, premium on redemption or other payment on such securities, bonds, annuity certificates, savings certificates, other certificates issued by the Central Government and deposits as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify in this behalf.

(iia) In the case of an individual or a Hindu Undivided Family, interest on such capital investment bonds as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify in this behalf (i.e. 7% Capital Investment Bonds);

(iib) In the case of an individual or a Hindu Undivided Family, interest on such Relief Bonds as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify in this behalf (i.e., 9% or 8.5% or 8% or 7% Relief Bonds); (iid) Interest on NRI bonds;

(iiia) Interest on securities held by the issue department of the Central Bank of Ceylon constituted under the Ceylon Monetary Law Act, 1949;

(iiib) Interest payable to any bank incorporated in a country outside India and authorised to perform central banking functions in that country on any deposits made by it, with the approval of the Reserve Bank of India or with any scheduled bank;

(iv) Certain interest payable by Government or a local authority on moneys borrowed by it, including hedging charges on currency fluctuation (from the AY 2000-2001), etc.

(v) Interest on Gold Deposit Bonds;

(vi) Interest on certain deposits are: Bhopal Gas victims;

(vii) Interest on bonds of local authorities as notified, and

(viii) Interest on 6.5% Savings Bonds [Exempt] issued by RBI.

12. Scholarship and awards, etc.

Any kind of scholarship granted to meet the cost of education is exempt from tax under Section 10(16). Similarly, certain awards and rewards, etc. are completely exempt from tax under Section 10(17A), for example, Lakhotia Puraskar of Rs 31,000 awarded to the best Rajasthani author, every year under Notification No. 199/28/95-IT (A-I) dated 22-4-1996. Any daily allowance received by a Member of Parliament or by an MLA or any member of any Committee of Parliament or State legislature is also exempt from tax under Section 10(17).

13. Gallantry awards, etc. Section 10(18)

The Finance Act, 1999 has, with effect from AY 2000-2001, provided for complete exemption for the pension and family pension of Gallantry Award Winners like Paramvir Chakra, Mahavir Chakra, and Vir Chakra and also other Gallantry Award winners notified by the Central Government.

14. Dividends on shares and units - Section 10(34) & (35)

With effect from the Assessment Year 2004-05, the dividend income and income of units of mutual funds received by the assessee completely exempt from income tax.

15. Long-term capital gains of transfer of securities - Section 10(38)

With effect from FY 2004-05, any income arising to a taxpayer on account of sale of long-term capital asset being securities is completely outside the purview of tax liability especially when the transaction has been subjected to Securities Transaction Tax (STT).

Thus, if the shares of any company listed in the stock exchange are sold after holding it for a minimum period of one year then there will be no liability to payment of capital gains. This provision would even apply for the old shares which are held by an assesse and are sold after the Finance (No.2) Act, 2004 came into force.

16. Amount received by way of gift, etc - Section 10(39)

As per the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2004, gift, etc. received after 1-9-2004 by individual or HUF in cash or by way of credit, etc. is being subjected to tax if the same is not received from a relative, etc. However, Section 10(39) provides that the amount received to the extent of Rs 50,000 will, however, be exempt from the purview of tax payment.

Similarly, amount received on the occasion of marriage from non-relative, etc. would also be exempted. It may be noted that the gift from relatives, etc. as mentioned in the section can be received without any upper limit.

mind of the Virginia Tech shooter

The South Korean student, the perpetrator of the worst campus carnage in US history, left behind a remorseless and macabre signature in the form of videos, photos and words between his twin attacks at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute, according to footage broadcast by NBC.
Apparently after carrying out the first two shootings, Cho Seung-Hui, 23, had enough composure to go to a local post office and mail a package containing audio-video materials to NBC News. According to the postal stamp on the Express Mail Cho mailed at 9.01 a.m. from Blacksburg, some an hour and 45 minutes after a 911 call alerted the police to the first shootings at West Ambler Johnston residence hall.
About 45 minutes later Cho returned to the campus, this time to unleash the kind of violence America is still shuddering from.
Twenty three Quicktime videos and 29 photographs, showing Cho in complete control of his senses, were aimed at telling the world of unspecified wrongs and humiliation he had suffered. NBC News said the videos were shot over at least six days, a testimony to how coldly Cho planned the massacre. It raises the possibility that he might have had some kind of accomplice to help with the package and taking pictures.
The videos and photos showed Cho in various poses such as brandishing a knife near his own throat and pointing a handgun to his own head. One picture shows him tightly holding a hammer. Some of the images show Cho wearing a black T-shirt, a tan vest and a backward baseball cap. In other pictures, he wears a white T-shirt with a black, gun-holster vest.
The purpose of the materials was apparently to underscore his resolve and, in a bizarre way, rationalize what he was about to embark on.
Cho's utterances are mostly meanderings of a deeply disturbed yet remarkably determined mind.
'You had a hundred billion chances and ways to have avoided today,' he says in one clip. 'But you decided to spill my blood. You forced me into a corner and gave me only one option. The decision was yours. Now you have blood on your hands that will never wash off.'
'You just loved crucifying me,' he says in another, 'You loved inducing cancer in my head, terrorizing my heart and ripping my soul all the time.'
Then he rants against those with wealth and material success. 'Do you know what it feels like to be torched alive? Do you know what it feels like to be humiliated?' he wonders.
'You had everything you wanted. Your Mercedes wasn't enough. Your vodka and cognac wasn't enough. Your trust fund wasn't enough. All your debaucheries weren't enough.'
'When the time came I did it, I had to,' he said in one video clip.
Revelations after the killings speak of the 23-year-old student majoring in English being a seriously disturbed man with some highly violent imagery as manifest in a couple of plays he wrote. Many are troubled that despite telltale signs of his worrisome nature neither the authorities at Virginia Tech nor the police took any pre-emptive action on the grounds that he had really not threatened or harmed anyone before the killings. Except for a couple of incidents of stalking fellow female students, Cho has been described as a loner.
Authorities were tight-lipped on the new development, and university officials decided against holding a press conference after the footage was released.
'This may be a very new critical component of this investigation,' State Police Chief Steve Flaherty said at an earlier press conference, which was also cut short.

House OF Stars

Aishwarya Rai occupies the 12th floor of Lamar, a building near Bandra's famous Mount Mary church

On the avenue between Salman and Shah Rukh Khan's homes lives the mysterious Rekha
John Abraham


Galaxy Apartments, where Salman Khan stays.


AMIR KHAN Aamir Khan too is a native of Bandra
Shah Rukh Khan's home Mannat, which faces the Bandra seafront, is an obvious tourist spot.

Infosys Q4 Profit up at Rs 1,144 crores

Infosys Technologies Ltd has announced the following audited results for the quarter and year ended March 31, 2007:

The results for the quarter ended March 31, 2007

The company has posted a net profit after tax and exceptional items of Rs 1,124 crore (Rs 11.24 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2007 as compared to Rs 664 crore (Rs 6.64 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2006. Total Income has increased from Rs 2563 crore (Rs 25.63 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2006 to Rs 3675 crore (Rs 36.75 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2007.

The results for the year ended March 31, 2007

The company has posted a net profit after tax and exceptional items of Rs 3783 crore (Rs 37.83 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2007 as compared to Rs 2421 crores (Rs 24.21 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2006. Total Income has increased from Rs 9172 crores (Rs 91.72 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2006 to Rs 13524 crores (Rs 135.24 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2007.

The consolidated results are as follows:

The consolidated results for the quarter ended March 31, 2007

The group has posted a net profit after tax, exceptional items and minority interest of Rs 1144 crore (Rs 11.44 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2007 as compared to Rs 673 crore (Rs 6.73 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2006. Total Income has increased from Rs 2696 crores (Rs 26.96 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2006 to Rs 3891 crores (Rs 38.91 billion) for the quarter ended March 31, 2007.

The consolidated results for the year ended March 31, 2007

The group has posted a net profit after tax, exceptional items and minority interest of Rs 3856 crores (Rs 38.56 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2007 as compared to Rs 2458 crores (Rs 24.58 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2006. Total Income has increased from Rs 9660 crores (Rs 96.6 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2006 to Rs 14265 crores (Rs 142.65 billion) for the year ended March 31, 2007.

Business outlook

Infosys has announced the following business outlook:

The company's outlook (consolidated) for the quarter ending June 30, 2007 and the fiscal year ending March 31, 2008, under Indian GAAP and US GAAP, is as follows:

Outlook under Indian GAAP - consolidated

Quarter ending June 30, 2007**

  • Income is expected to be in the range of Rs 3896 crores (Rs 38.96 billion) and Rs 3913 (Rs 39.13 billion); YoY growth of 29.2 per cent - 29.8 per cent
  • Earnings per share before exceptional item is expected to be Rs 17.84; YoY growth of 24.2 per cent

Fiscal year ending March 31, 2008**

  • Income is expected to be in the range of Rs 17038 crores (Rs170.38 billion) and Rs 17308 crores (Rs 173.08 billion); YoY growth of 22.6 per cent-24.6 per cent.
  • Earnings per share***before exceptional item are expected to be between Rs 80.29 and Rs 81.58; YoY growth of 20.0 per cent-22.0 per cent

** Conversion 1 US$ = Rs 43.10

*** Excluding tax reversal of Rs 1250 million in fiscal 2007

Outlook under US GAAP

Quarter ending June 30, 2007

  • Consolidated revenues are expected to be in the range of U$ 904 million and $ 908 million; YoY growth of 37.0 per cent- 37.6 per cent.
  • Consolidated earnings per American Depositary Share are expected to be $ 0.41; YoY growth of 28.2 per cent

Fiscal year ending March 31, 2008

  • Consolidated revenues are expected to be in the range of $ 3.95 billion and $ 4.02 billion; YoY growth of 28.0 per cent-30.0 per cent
  • Consolidated earnings per American Depositary Share*** are expected to be between $ 1.86 and $ 1.89; YoY growth of 25.7 per cent-27.7 per cent

*** Excluding tax reversal of US$ 29 million in fiscal 2007

"Our revenues are expected to grow to US$ 4 billion next fiscal," said S. Gopalakrishnan (Kris), chief operating officer, president and joint managing director. "Our continuous investments in brand, infrastructure, technology, people, intellectual capital and service offerings have positioned us well to take full advantage of the continued globalisation of services."

Infosys has also informed the Bombay Stock Exchange that the board of directors of the company at its meeting held on April 13, 2007, inter alia, has recommended a final dividend of Rs 6.50 per share (130 per cent on the equity share par value Rs 5).

Further the company has informed that, the board of directors has approved the following changes in the senior management of the Company that will become effective from June 22, 2007.

  • Nandan M Nilekani becomes the co-chairman of the board
  • S Gopalakrishnan assumes the role of chief executive officer and managing director.
  • S D Shibulal assumes the role of chief operating officer of the company.

Offshore salary

Infosys said it has increased offshore salaries by around 12-15 per cent for 2007-08.

The company's head-HRD, education & research, T V Mohandas Pai said the company is making substantial investments in creating a scalable training engine in Mysore to support its future growth.

"By December 2007, we will have the capacity to train 13,500 employees at a time," Pai said.

Source: Bombay Stock Exchange and PTI


Importance of Sitemap in SEO

What is a Sitemap?

A sitemap displays the inner framework and organization of your site's content to the search engines. Your sitemap should reflect the way visitors would intuitively work through your site. Years ago sitemaps existed only as a boring series of links in líst förm. Today, they are thought of as an extension of your site. You should use your sitemap as a tool to provide your visitor and the search engines with more content. Create details for each section and sub-section through descriptive text placed under the sitemap link. This will help your visitors understand and navigate through your site, and will also give you more food for the search engines. You can even go crazy and add Flash to your sitemap like we did with the interactive Bruce Clay sitemap! Of course, if you do include a Flash sitemap for your visitor, you will also need to include a text map so that the robots can read it.

A good site map will:

Show a quick, easy to follow overview of your site. Provide a pathway for the search engine robots to follow. Provide text links to every page of your site. Quickly show visitors how to get where they need to go. Give visitors a short description of what they can expect to find on each page. Utilize important keyword phrases.

Why They Are Important?

Sitemaps are very important for two main reasons. First, your sitemap provides food for the search engine spiders that crawl your site. The sitemap will give the spider links to all the major pages of your site, allowing every page included on your sitemap to be indexed by the spider. This is a very good thing! Having all of your major pages included in the search engine database will make your site more likely to come up in the search engine results when a user performs a query. Your sitemap pushes the search engine toward the individual pages of your site instead of making them hunt around for links. A well planned site map can ensure your Web site is fully indexed by search engines. Sitemaps are also very valuable for you human visitors. They help them to understand your site structure and layout, while giving them quick access to your entire site. It is also helpful for lost users in need of a lifeline. Often if a visitor finds themselves lost or stuck inside your page, he will begin to look for a way out of his hole. Having a detailed sitemap will show him how to get back on track and find what he was looking for. Without it, your visitor would have just closed the browser or headed back over to the search engines. Conversion lost.