Government on Saturday announced that new Income Tax Return (ITR) Forms that require disclosure of details regarding bank accounts and foreign trips undertaken by an individual will be reconsidered, a move that comes after criticism from tax experts and others. It will come out with simplified ITR forms, it was officially announced. "The Finance Minister has called me from Washington and said the whole matter related to new ITR form will be reconsidered. The government will simplify the ITR form," Revenue Secretary Shaktikanta Das said.

He said this decision comes in the wake of difficulties expressed by various sections and tax experts on the new ITR forms relation to financial year 2014-15. There has been criticism of the new forms with experts and consultants saying government was seeking too much data. They felt that the addition of new information would make process of filing returns difficult. The discussion on the IT forms exploded on social media as the new forms were panned by one and all.

Twitteratis had a good time turning the joke on politicians themselves.

Income Tax returns will no longer be "Saral". Declare foreign trips, details about passport, sources of money spent in 14-page I-T form — babu blogger (@babublogger) April 18, 2015

Indians now have to file details of foreign trips in their IT returns. The Prime Minister's income tax returns must make interesting reading — Madhavan Narayanan (@madversity) April 18, 2015

Now u have to submit expenses incurred in Foreign trips to Income Tax dept. Awkward for Adani to write 'Modi's Wardrobe' after every trip April 17, 2015

#ArunJaitley should introduce 200 pages of income tax return form for willy politicians for expenditure incurred on wedding of assorted kins — Ashok Garekar (@DrGarekar) April 18, 2015

On Friday, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), the apex policy making body of the Income Tax department, notified the new ITR forms for the current assessment year, seeking additional details to check the menace of black money. As it stands, the new ITR forms, including the ITR-1 and ITR-2, require an assessee to furnish the number of bank accounts held by the individual "at any time (including opened/closed) during the previous year" with the last balance in the account on March 31 of the just-concluded fiscal.

The assessee will also have to furnish the name of the bank, account numbers, their address, IFSC code and any possible joint account holder. When it comes to disclosure of foreign travel, the taxman wants the assessee's passport number, its place of issuance, countries visited, number of times such sojourns made and in case of a resident taxpayer, the expenses incurred from "own sources in relation to such travel.

The I-T department, last year, had made it mandatory for taxpayers to mention details of all assets they hold in a foreign soil under a new schedule-details of foreign assets and income from any source outside India. The new measures are part of the government's effort to tackle black money in an non-obtrusive manner. The details will add to the taxman's knowledge about a particular assessee.

The new ITR forms, this time, also feature a new column to include the Aadhaar number of the assessee. T P Ostwal, international tax expert, said the new forms would make it cumbersome for taxpayers to keep details of their official visits and to seek those details from companies especially if they leave them mid-day during the year.

He felt that the government was expecting too much when it asked people undertaking pleasure trips to file such details. Ostwal also said that some of the information government was asking is already available from other sources including including the Annual Information Returns (AIRs).