Sana2017
I am offered a consultant post in an institute but the appointment letter mentions pay under the head gross salary split into basic, ta, speciaL allowance..is it technically n legally right? and it mentions that 10% TDS will be deducted ...
In such case should I pay rest of tax according to gross pay as self assessment tax...?
Will the Consultant post confer a employee-employer relationship in this context?

From India, Mumbai
Dinesh Divekar
7881

Dear Sana,
Your client does not know the difference between salary and consulting charges. While former can be divided into several components like basic, house rent etc the latter is consolidated amount.
Anyway, even without understanding of the difference they will be deducting TDS of 10% which is legally correct. This deduction will be under Section 194J of IT Act. In your IT assessment you may show payment of this tax to get the input credit.
Thanks,
Dinesh Divekar

From India, Bangalore
shallohal
29

Hi Sana2017,

It's been a while and probably this will be my first contribution. I am just reading stuffs and I feel I can provide some insight.

To put it in a simple term, as a Consultant you should have what we can call a 'deed of agreement' or any agreement between you specifying as their 'consultant' and 1st party the company you are consulting with. Appointment letter is basically provided if you are under their payroll as an employee, in which as per your post I sense you don't work directly under any of the Directors or superiors of that company you're referring with --please correct me here if I am wrong.

Consultation, as you best know, provides improvement plans and recommends best solution available in any pre-existing policies/procedures. It's up to the company's management should they take it positively/seriously but if you sell it well then they might see a good future plan about your recommendations. Example: If you are a consultant of a training program and you surveyed the employees career plans/paths, in order for them to stay more years in the company and minimize the migration you may then recommend those training programs suited with their needs according to the survey/interviews. This involves cost of course and it's up to the company management to see if your recommendations are feasible.

With regard to tax, I am not familiar with it but as my suggestion above goes you only get paid consultation fees and the rest tax should be paid by you as per (we say) your tax declaration.

Good luck and more power!

Shallohal

Bangladesh

From Bangladesh, Dhaka
Community Support and Knowledge-base on business, career and organisational prospects and issues - Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query, download formats and be part of a fostered community of professionals.





Contact Us Privacy Policy Disclaimer Terms Of Service

All rights reserved @ 2024 CiteHR ®

All Copyright And Trademarks in Posts Held By Respective Owners.