Saturday, June 6, 2026

Clause 22(ii) of Form 3CD — A Reporting Obligation Wider Than the Law It Serves

By CA Surekha Ahuja

 When a mandatory reporting clause requires figures that have no bearing on any tax disallowance, it is not rigour — it is an unnecessary burden on businesses and auditors alike. A hard look at the mismatch between Clause 22(ii) and Section 43B(h).

There is a specific kind of compliance burden that is harder to justify than a difficult one — and that is a purposeless one. Clause 22(ii) of Form 3CD, as currently worded, falls squarely into this category. It demands reporting of data that has no connection to the tax disallowance it is meant to facilitate.

This post examines the structural mismatch between Clause 22(ii) and Section 43B(h), explains why the current reporting scope is wider than any legitimate tax purpose, and suggests both interim practical steps for practitioners and the case for reform.

What Clause 22(ii) Requires

Clause 22(ii) of Form 3CD requires the tax auditor to report the total amount required to be paid to a Micro or Small Enterprise (as referred to in Section 15 of the MSMED Act, 2006) during the previous year — not merely the amount outstanding at year-end.

The Core Mismatch: Flow Data vs. Stock-Based Disallowance

Section 43B(h), inserted by the Finance Act 2023 with effect from FY 2023–24, disallows any sum payable to a Micro or Small Enterprise as a business deduction unless it is actually paid within the credit period prescribed under Section 15 of the MSMED Act — 15 days (without written agreement) or 45 days (with written agreement). The amount remaining unpaid beyond these limits as at 31st March is added back. Amounts paid during the year — whether in 10 days or 40 days — are tax-neutral. No disallowance. No consequence.

This is, by design, a stock-based disallowance. It operates on what remains unpaid at year-end. Clause 22(ii), however, demands flow data — the total amount that moved through the ledger over twelve months. These two are structurally incompatible.

Parameter

Clause 22(ii) Requires

Section 43B(h) Operates On

Total invoiced by MSME vendors during the year

Yes — mandatorily Tax Irrelevant

Not needed

Amounts paid within 15/45 days during the year

Yes — part of computation Zero consequence

Fully deductible — no examination required

Amount unpaid at 31st March beyond credit period

Yes — included Relevant

This is the only figure that drives disallowance

Interest on delayed MSME payments (P&L)

Implicit verification expected

Disallowed regardless under Sec 23 of MSMED Act — no audit consequence

"If a business has paid ₹11.4 crore to MSME vendors during the year and ₹60 lakh remains unpaid at 31st March, only ₹60 lakh is relevant to Section 43B(h). Clause 22(ii) requires reporting and verification of the entire ₹12 crore — an exercise with zero incremental tax consequence."

Three Questions That Need Answers

1 What is the administrative purpose of "total during the year"?

The aggregate payment figure has no corresponding entry in any vendor's ITR, making cross-verification impossible. It does not determine the disallowance quantum, which depends solely on the year-end unpaid balance. If the intent is MSME policy data collection, the mechanism for that is the Ministry of MSME — not a tax audit report. The clause's reporting scope is wider than any identifiable tax purpose.

Was Clause 22(ii) recalibrated when Section 43B(h) was inserted?

Section 43B(h) was inserted by the Finance Act 2023. Clause 22(ii) predates it and appears to have been carried forward without alignment to the new disallowance provision. The result is a reporting obligation drafted around an older framework being applied to a provision with a fundamentally different operative basis. This is not a policy disagreement — it is a drafting misalignment that has created a recurring compliance burden with no corresponding tax outcome.

Should the tax auditor verify MSME interest provisions?

Interest on delayed MSME payments under Section 16 of the MSMED Act is non-deductible under Section 23 of that Act — regardless of how it is treated in the books. Whether the auditor verifies that adequate interest has been provided changes nothing in the tax computation. This is an audit step without an audit consequence, which is a use of professional time that is difficult to justify.

The Practical Burden

For a business with 150 or more vendors, complying with Clause 22(ii) as currently worded requires: identifying all vendors holding valid UDYAM registrations as Micro or Small enterprises (which most ERP systems do not natively track); extracting twelve months of payment history for each such vendor; date-stamping each transaction against invoice dates to verify payment timelines; and presenting all of this to the tax auditor for verification.

For large manufacturing or trading concerns, this is a multi-week exercise each audit season — consuming finance team bandwidth, ERP customisation effort, and significant audit hours. The cost is real and recurring. The tax outcome it generates is nil, to the extent amounts were paid during the year.

The Logical Fix

Restrict Clause 22(ii) reporting to: (a) amounts remaining unpaid to MSME vendors at the close of the previous year, categorised by whether they fall within or beyond the permissible credit period under Section 15 of the MSMED Act; and (b) the quantum added back under Section 43B(h). This aligns reporting with the disallowance provision it is meant to facilitate — and eliminates the rest as superfluous.

Interim Practical Approach for Tax Auditors

Until the clause is amended, the following approach can bring structure to the exercise while managing the scope to what is professionally defensible:

Recommended Protocol — AY 2025–26 Onwards

→Management representation as the primary basis. Obtain a written representation from management listing all MSME-registered vendors (with UDYAM numbers), total amounts invoiced during the year, amounts paid, and amounts outstanding at year-end with dates. This defines your verification perimeter and shifts the factual foundation to management.

→Vendor-tagged ledger data. Where the client's accounting system permits MSME-tagging of the vendor master, a ledger extract is the most efficient and defensible basis. Advocate for prospective tagging so that future years are less burdensome.

→Risk-based sampling for the "total during year" figure. Since this figure has no tax consequence, a documented risk-based sampling approach — rather than exhaustive verification — is professionally defensible, provided the methodology is clearly recorded in the working papers.

→Scope limitation disclosure. Where MSME classification data is unavailable — as will frequently be the case for vendors who have not shared UDYAM details — state this limitation explicitly in the audit file. The auditor's responsibility is bounded by information reasonably available and formally requested.

→Formal ICAI representation. Raise this through your regional branch to ICAI's Direct Taxes Committee for a representation to CBDT. The ask is narrow, technically grounded, and non-controversial: align Clause 22(ii) reporting with the operative scope of Section 43B(h).

The rationalisation of Clause 22(ii) is precisely the kind of targeted, technical reform that such representations are designed to achieve. The ask does not dilute MSME protection in any way — Section 43B(h) should remain exactly as it is. The ask is simply to align the reporting obligation with the tax consequence. That is a request that is difficult to argue against on either policy or administrative grounds.

In Summary

Clause 22(ii) as currently worded requires reporting of the total amount paid to MSME vendors during the entire previous year. Section 43B(h) disallows only what remains unpaid at year-end. The former is a flow measure; the latter is a stock-based disallowance. Aligning the two is not a radical ask — it is basic legislative housekeeping that would save the business community and the auditing profession significant effort every audit season, at no cost to revenue and no dilution of MSME protection.