Why This GAAR?
Arnab Naskar & Shubhangi Gupta
GAAR is destined to be a way of life for taxpayers in India. But is it a boon or a curse? How does it compare with the provisions in other Countries? Does it have loopholes? Can it be circumvented? Will it be used as a tool to harass the taxpayer? These are the crucial existential questions that the young authors have dared to ask and, after commendable research, answered them with remarkable clarity
1. Introduction
A country levies taxes, both direct and indirect for promoting its own economic development. For economic development not only domestic capital is necessary but also the contribution of foreign capital in the domestic market is required. Prior to 1970, world trade grew at a greater pace than that of the FDI, but in the following decades since then the flow of FDI has grown at twice the pace of the growth of worldwide exports.1 Hence the sovereign authorities felt the need to relax the taxation statutes in order to seek contribution from foreign capitalists, with an ultimate motive of economic development.
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