Ruling out any adverse impact on tax collections, the Centre on Friday said it had already initiated moves to make stamp paper tamper proof in the face of the recent multi-crore counterfeit racket unearthed in Maharashtra.
"The government is fully seized (seized) of the matter and some specific actions have been initiated. If any support is sought by the states, the government of India will support them," Finance Secretary D C Gupta told reporters in Delhi while releasing the mid-year economic review.
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He said though the Stamp Act is a central government law there are certain changes that can be made by state governments. Gupta said some, like Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, have already evolved new methods to keep the tax collection going in the wake of the scam.
While some of the states have decided to introduce demand draft in lieu of stamp paper for tax collection of over Rs 500, others were taking recourse to franking machines.
"There are several methods of revenue collections and stamp paper is not the only method," he said without elaborating.