{"id":2507,"date":"2016-03-26T10:33:50","date_gmt":"2016-03-26T05:03:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.itatonline.org\/articles_new\/?p=2507"},"modified":"2016-03-26T15:23:25","modified_gmt":"2016-03-26T09:53:25","slug":"an-expert-analysis-of-international-tax-provisions-in-finance-bill-2016-relating-to-equalisation-levy-beps-and-poem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/an-expert-analysis-of-international-tax-provisions-in-finance-bill-2016-relating-to-equalisation-levy-beps-and-poem\/","title":{"rendered":"An Expert Analysis Of International Tax Provisions In Finance Bill 2016 Relating To Equalisation Levy, BEPS And POEM"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-content\/uploads\/BEPS-150x150.png\" alt=\"BEPS\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" class=\"alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-2509\" \/><\/p>\n<p><strong>CA Padamchand Khincha, CA. P Shivanand Nayak, CA. Prem Raj Rathod and CA. Mohit A Parmar have conducted an expert analysis of the provisions in the Finance Bill 2016 relating to the imposition of Equalisation Levy, Place of Effective Management (POEM) and Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) and explained all of its implications in a simple and easy-to-understand format<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Finance Bill 2016 has recommended  various amendments to the Income-tax statute. These amendments are spread over  various facets of the Act right from definitions to penal provisions. Among  these amendments, the Finance Ministry recommends some of the far reaching  amendments in international tax space. We have deliberated on few of them  crafted into three portions below:<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>  <strong>Part A: Is Equalisation Levy a tax? <\/p>\n<p>\n    [By CA. P Shivanand Nayak]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n  The rise of machines is making a  deep impact and inroads into the global economy. Business acumen is getting  digitised. The dawn of digital age has transformed the experience of working or  shopping. Software has replaced labour. Physical stores and exhibition is  replaced by smart web-portals. Human interface is reduced to mouse clicks and  key-tapping. The aura of digital economy has hijacked the business dynamics in  a new direction. Innovation in the digital leads to mushrooming of niche and  complex business models. Many such new business models are in vogue.  E-commerce, app stores, online advertising, cloud computing, high speed  trading, e-payments are today&rsquo;s business necessity.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The physical gap between the vendor  and consumer is no more a concern. The virtual proximity has narrowed the  physical gap. In this e-age, the target customers are reached through internet.  Online advertising is a manifestation of the transformation. Today advertising  is not just information dissemination tool but has significant influence on  consumer&rsquo;s decision making. It is not just a medium of marketing, but provides  precision in monitoring performance of ads, tracking consumer loyalty and  analysing customer interests\/preferences. Online advertising takes various  forms. Some of them are display ads (wherein advertiser pays to display ads  linked to particular content); search engine ads (advertiser pays to appear  among internet search results); ads on social websites (such as facebook,  twitter etc.). <\/p>\n<p>\n  Internet advertising is rapidly  growing both in terms of revenue and share in the total advertising market. The  volume of internet advertising reached USD 135.4 billion in 2014. The market  for internet advertising is projected to grow at a rate of 12.1% per year  during the period 2014 to 20192. As the stakes started rocketing,  taxing such virtual transactions attained prominence. The existing provisions  of the income-tax statute were unable to tie the noose around these  transactions. Perhaps the reason is Indian income-tax legislation is still  governed by <em>Quill Rule<\/em>3 (physical presence test). The search  for new basis of taxation became inevitable. The question was whether the tax  should be on consumption or income? <\/p>\n<p>\n  The first statutory initiative in  this direction is now proposed. Finance Bill 2016 seeks to charge an  Equalisation Levy of 6% on certain specified services. This levy is reflected  in Chapter VIII of the Finance Bill. The objective was clearly to tax the  online transactions which was nebulous and having no physical presence which  made their taxation in the service country difficult. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The clarity in the objective has  not correspondingly translated into the provisions of the Equalisation Levy.  There appears to be a slip in the intent and literal translation of the  provisions housed in Chapter VIII of Finance Bill. It is already hounded by  varied issues which makes a levy of this nature unworkable (some of the issues  pointed at the end of this write-up). <\/p>\n<p>\n  Before dwelling into the merits of  a particular legislation, any provision has to pass the litmus test of  constitutional validity. Legislative power in India is divided into three lists  of the Constitution [Schedule VII read with Article 245 of the Indian  Constitution]. In pith and substance it has to fall into one of the entries  therein. Precise affirmation of whether the impost christened as Equalisation  Levy would fall within Entry 82 of the Union list (as a variant of income-tax)  or Entry 97 (under the residuary entry) is critical. Constitutionally, whether  it has to be construed as a tax on income or levy on service? Reckoning the  Constitutional validity is thus the starter. However, in this write-up, we have  focused on a larger aspect of whether amounts paid as &lsquo;Equalisation Levy&rsquo; can  be construed to be a part of &lsquo;income-tax&rsquo;? <\/p>\n<p>\n  The term &lsquo;Equalisation Levy&rsquo; has  been defined in Section 161(d) of the Finance Bill to mean a <strong><em><u>tax <\/u><\/em><\/strong><em>leviable on consideration  received or receivable for any specified service under the provisions of this  Chapter.<\/em> The definition defines Equalisation Levy to be a &lsquo;tax&rsquo;. The term  &lsquo;tax&rsquo; has not been defined in the Chapter. Clause (j) to Section 161 provides  that words or expressions used but not defined in the said Chapter and which  are specifically defined in the Income-tax Act; shall have the meanings  respectively assigned to them in the Income-tax Act. In other words, terms  which are undefined in Chapter VIII (to Finance Bill) have to mandatorily  borrow their meaning from Income-tax Act. Section 2(43) of the Income-tax Act  defines tax as under:<\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>&quot;&quot;Tax&quot;  in relation to the assessment year commencing on the 1st day of April, 1965,  and any subsequent assessment year <u>means  income-tax chargeable under the provisions of this Act<\/u>, and in relation to  any other assessment year income-tax and super-tax chargeable under the  provisions of this Act prior to the aforesaid date and in relation to the  assessment year commencing on the 1st day of April, 2006, and any subsequent  assessment year includes the fringe benefit tax payable under Section 115WA&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  The section <em>inter alia<\/em> defines tax to mean &lsquo;income-tax chargeable under the provisions of this Act&rsquo;.  From an Income-tax Act standpoint, tax means &lsquo;income-tax&rsquo; (including other  taxes mentioned in the definition which are not relevant in the present  context). As mentioned earlier, Section 161(j) mandates that undefined words in  the Chapter shall have meanings assigned to them in Income-tax Act. The impost  is unqualified. Such meaning is not subject to any qualifications or caveats.  Accordingly, the term &lsquo;tax&rsquo; in Chapter VIII of the Finance Bill should mean  &lsquo;income-tax&rsquo;. It cannot be restricted to mean a levy which is distinct from  income-tax. <\/p>\n<p>\n  If the legislature wanted to give a  different meaning to the term, it could have either defined it in Section 161.  Alternatively, the closing portion of clause (j) could have been supplemented  by the words <em>&ldquo;unless there is something in the subject or context  inconsistent with such construction<\/em>&rdquo;. If these words were employed in  clause (j) one could have argued that tax in Chapter VIII is not &lsquo;income-tax&rsquo;  having regard to the context of the charge. Nothing prevented the legislature  from employing such language. The Chapter employs an unqualified language for  an unrestricted import of words from Income-tax Act. Accordingly, going by the  literal interpretation of the definition of Equalisation Levy, it should  constitute income-tax.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The linkage of Equalisation Levy to  Income-tax Act appears undisputable (apart from and in addition to the nexus  already discussed above). Section 175 enlists various provisions of Income-tax  Act which are applicable in relation to Equalisation Levy. The assessing and  appellate authorities are the same for the two statutes. Thus, the two imposts  are closely intertwined and operate in the same field.<\/p>\n<p>\n  It is interesting to note that the  term &lsquo;Equalisation Levy&rsquo; is proposed to be used twice in the Income-tax Act.  The intent and placement of these sections appear to indicate that  &lsquo;Equalisation Levy&rsquo; is synonymous to &lsquo;income-tax&rsquo;. <\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>Section 10(50): <\/strong>The section provides that any  income from any specified services (as defined in Chapter VIII) and which is  chargeable to Equalisation Levy is exempt from tax. Thus, if consideration  received or receivable for specified services suffers Equalisation Levy, no  income-tax would be charged on such income. Such exemption negates &lsquo;double  taxation&rsquo;. The memorandum to Finance Bill reiterates this rationale in the  following words &#8211; <\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>&ldquo;<u>In order to avoid double taxation<\/u>, it is  proposed to provide exemption under Section 10 of the Act for any income  arising from providing specified services on which Equalisation Levy is  chargeable.&rdquo; <\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  Double taxation is generally a  phenomenon when the same income is taxed twice under the same statute. Two  different statutes levying taxes (even though on same income) cannot amount to  double taxation. This is because, object of every legal framework is different.  However, a reference to double taxation in the context of Section 10(50) indicates  that Equalisation Levy and income-tax cannot be levied simultaneously. They are  mutually exclusive. If the nature of charge is different, the plea of double  taxation can never survive. By inference therefore, it is suggestive of the two  (income-tax and Equalisation Levy) being the same.<\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>Section 40(a)(ib):<\/strong> The section provides that the levy  paid or payable by the assessee towards specified services (on which  Equalisation Levy is chargeable) shall not be allowed as a deduction in case of  failure of the assessee to deduct and deposit the Equalisation Levy to the  credit of Central government.<\/p>\n<p>\n  It is pertinent to observe the  placement of this section in Section 40(a). If Equalisation Levy was a tax  other than income-tax, the same would have been covered within the provisions  of Section 43B(a). Clause (a) to Section 43B provides deduction for any sum  paid as tax, duty, cess or fee within the stipulated time provided therein. The  payment of Equalisation Levy would have been thus an allowable expenditure on  actual payment basis. There was therefore no necessity of a separate amendment  in Section 40(a). The legislature has found it fit to place this in Section  40(a). This is possibly because, Section 40(a)(ii) provides that any sum paid  on account of tax on profits or gains shall be disallowed. The new sub-clause  (ib) seeks to create an exception to the Section 40(a)(ii). It therefore became  necessary to insert the new provision within Section 40(a) itself.  Consequently, the income-tax and Equalisation Levy do not appear to be  different. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The legislative intention of the  proposed Equalisation Levy can be gathered from the budget speech of the  Hon&#8217;ble Finance Minister (while presenting Finance Bill 2016). At para 151 of  his speech he said:<\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>&ldquo;151.  In order to tap tax on income accruing to foreign e-commerce companies from  India, it is proposed that a person making payment to a non-resident, who does  not have a permanent establishment, exceeding in aggregate <\/em>` <em>1 lakh in a year, as consideration  for online advertisement, will withhold tax at 6% of gross amount paid, as  Equalisation Levy. The Levy will only apply to B2B transactions.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  The opening portion of the para  amply clarifies the objective is to create a charge on income accruing to  overseas e-commerce entities. The focus is thus to tax &lsquo;income&rsquo;. The proposed  charge is on the income of non-residents engaged in the specified services.  Equalisation levy is thus arguably a variant of income-tax. <\/p>\n<p>\n  However, this conclusion is not  sacrosanct. A contrary view is also in evidence. Income-tax is argued to be  distinct and separate from the Equalisation Levy. The following aspects draw a  distinction between Equalisation Levy and Income-tax:<\/p>\n<p>\n  (a) Equalisation  levy is proposed to be inserted into the statute <em>vide<\/em> a separate Chapter  in the Finance Bill. If the Levy and Income-tax were the same, the provisions  could have been introduced within the contours of the Income-tax itself  (similar to fringe benefit tax). The proposal to introduce it as a separate  chapter of Finance Bill is indicative of this intent to regard this levy as not  the same as income-tax.<\/p>\n<p>\n  (b) Chapter  VIII of the Finance Bill appears to be an attempt to create an independent code  by itself. There is a separate charging section, scope, levy, collection and  penal mechanisms. It borrows certain provisions from the Income-tax statute to  further strengthen its machinery provisions. Section 175 states that several  provisions of the Act shall apply to Equalisation Levy, as they apply to  income-tax. Such clarification is not required if the two imposts were  identical. Further, Chapter VIII extends to whole of India except Jammu &amp;  Kashmir. The scope is thus different from Income-tax Act (which is applicable  pan India). These factors are therefore suggestive of the fact that the two are  not the same.<\/p>\n<p>\n  (c) Chapter  VIII of the Finance Bill fastens the liability of deduction and payment of  Equalisation Levy on the payer. The onus is on the payer to ensure appropriate  and timely collection of taxes on behalf of the exchequer. The assessment  procedures and penal provisions are directed at the payer. The payee is only  the stimulus. Income of such non-resident payee is the trigger for this Levy.  However, he remains untouched by the tax collection and compliance mechanisms.  Being the income earner, he is never the focus of tax collection. Such modus  operandi is not evident in Income-tax statute which never absolves the income  earner\/ recipient from tax compliance. This is a stark difference in the two  provisions which darken the line of separation between income-tax and  Equalisation Levy. <\/p>\n<p>\n  (d)   Equalisation levy has been defined to mean tax. In the absence of the  definition in Chapter VIII, one would resort to Section 2(43). However, there  are no corresponding provisions in the Income-tax Act to accommodate or house  the Equalisation Levy within its ambit. There is not a single instance in the  Income-tax Act which explicitly acknowledge Equalisation Levy to be income-tax.<\/p>\n<p>\n  (e) BEPS  Action Plan 1 deliberated on four options to address the direct tax challenges  raised by digital economy. They were: (i) modifications to the exceptions to  Permanent Establishment; (ii) creation of new nexus through significant  economic nexus; (iii) imposition of withholding tax on certain digital  transactions; or (iv) introduction of excise tax or other levy. The Indian  legislature seeks to implement the last option. It is thus not a withholding  tax. This is suggestive of Equalisation Levy being different from income-tax.<\/p>\n<p>\n  Thus, contradictory views are in  evidence. An answer to this through clarification or appropriate amendment is  extremely critical. This ambiguity leaves many other associated questions  unanswered. One among them is whether an Equalisation Levy can be claimed as a  foreign tax credit while claiming relief under the Double taxation avoidance  agreement? The answer would be obvious if the Equalisation Levy is confirmed to  be a part of income-tax. If divorced from income-tax, such Equalisation Levy is  a tax on the online transaction\/ activity. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The Mumbai Tribunal in the case of <em>ADIT  v. Chiron Behring GmbH &amp; Co (2008) 24 SOT 278 (Mum)<\/em> had an occasion to  examine the applicability of India-Germany Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement.  In the said case, the assessee was liable to pay &lsquo;trade tax&rsquo; under the German  domestic tax provisions. The Revenue authorities argued that such tax is not  covered within the tax treaty. The Mumbai Tribunal rejected this argument by  observing that Article 6 of the German Trade Tax Act states &lsquo;The basis of  taxation for Trade Tax is the income from the business&rsquo;. From this finding, it  concluded that the trade tax is not a turnover tax, but only is tax on the  income from business. Such tax was thus held to be eligible for tax treaty  purposes.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The basis for Equalisation Levy is  also income from business. This cannot be disputed. The question is can one  extend the dictum of Mumbai Tribunal in the present case? Possibly it can be  applied only when the definition of Indian tax in the treaties are suitably  widened to house Equalisation Levy. Some answer is also available in the roots  of such levy. The BEPS Action Plan 1 dealing with Digital Economy appears to be  the source for such proposed levy by the Indian legislature. At para 307 of the  Action point, there is a discussion on relationship of Equalisation Levy with  corporate income-tax which is as under:<\/p>\n<p>\n   <strong><em>&ldquo;7.6.4.3.  Relationship with corporate income tax<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>307.  Imposing an Equalisation Levy raises risks that the same income would be  subject to both corporate income tax and the levy. This could arise either in  the situation in which a foreign entity is subject to the levy at source and to  corporate income tax in its country of residence or in the situation in which  an entity is subject to both corporate income tax and the levy in the country  of source. <u>In the case of a foreign entity, for  example, if the income is subject to corporate income tax in the country of  residence of the enterprise, the levy would be unlikely to be creditable  against that tax. <\/u>To address these potential concerns, it would be  necessary to structure the levy to apply only to situations in which the income  would otherwise be untaxed or subject only to a very low rate of tax.&rdquo;  (emphasis supplied)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  Action Plan 1 thus expresses its  doubts with regard to claim of such levy against corporate income-tax. BEPS  Action Plan being the source of Equalisation Levy, the doubt in the action  point can form the basis for denying foreign tax credit by the Indian legislature\/  judiciary.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The focus of this write-up has only  been to address the above discussed &lsquo;uncertainty in characterization&rsquo; of this  levy. The legislature has several other complex issues (in this levy) to cure.  Some of them are as under:<\/p>\n<p>\n  (a) Can  Equalisation Levy create a territorial nexus with India which Income-tax could  not establish?<\/p>\n<p>\n  (b) Whether  the threshold of ` 1lakh is a standard deduction or a threshold? Is it to be examined  from vendor or consumer perspective?<\/p>\n<p>\n  (c) Is the  present online payment system geared up to permit &lsquo;deduction&rsquo; of levy on  payment or &lsquo;grossing up&rsquo; is the only recourse? Further, will grossing up shield  the payer from penal consequences?<\/p>\n<p>\n  (d) Should  such transactions pass through form 15CA and 15CB certification?<\/p>\n<p>\n  To conclude, it is of primary  importance that the nature of this levy be abundantly clarified. There is  presently an ambiguity in the legislative semantics. The memorandum to Finance  Bill clarifies that Equalisation Levy owes its origin to BEPS Action Plan.  Equalisation levy therein (in the Action Plan) was a suggested means of taxing  economic nexus. Although the Levy was introduced, the Finance Bill does not  explain the manner in which such Levy justifies &lsquo;economic nexus&rsquo;. Neither the  budget speech nor the memorandum to Finance Bill clarifies why the option of  Equalisation Levy was chosen as the most appropriate method of taxing online  transactions. The rationale behind such levy is thus obscure. The Finance Bill  seeks to arrest every online advertising transaction above rupees one lakh.  Such low threshold seeks to capture even those transactions whose Indian nexus  is fragile. <\/p>\n<p>\n  With the emergence of Digital India  as the Indian household sermon, online and real time transactions are only on  the rise. Online advertisement is the inseparable portion of these virtual  transactions. They cannot be left grappling with uncertainty. The stakes are  high. Clarity in this regard is inevitable to ensure the Government&rsquo;s goal of  &lsquo;reducing litigation&rsquo;. The ghost of uncertainty in taxation should not eclipse  the digitization process.<\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>Part B: Deferral of POEM <\/p>\n<p>\n    [By CA. Prem Raj Rathod]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n  The residential status of a company  is determined by the tests enunciated in Section 6(3) of the Income-tax Act,  1961 (hereinafter referred as &lsquo;Act&rsquo;). Prior to Finance Act, 2015, a foreign  company was held to be a resident in India if during that year, the control and  management of its affairs was situated wholly in India. Finance Act, 2015  amended Section 6(3), to provide that a company would be resident in India in any  previous year if it is an Indian company or its Place of Effective Management  (POEM) in that year was in India. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The amended sub-section (3) to  Section 6 read as under:<\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>&ldquo;(3)  A company is said to be resident in India in any previous year, if&mdash;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  <em>(i)  It is an  Indian company ; or<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  <em>(ii)  Its  place of effective management, in that year, is in India.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  <em> Explanation  &ndash; For the purposes of this clause &ldquo;place of effective management&rdquo; means the  place where key management and commercial decisions that are necessary for the  conduct of the business of an entity as a whole are, in substance made.&rdquo;<\/em> <\/p>\n<p>\n  The amended provisions of Section  6(3) were to come into effect from Assessment Year 2016-17. The Finance Bill,  2016 proposes to defer the implementation of POEM as test of residency by one  year to apply from Assessment Year 2017-18 onwards. The Finance Minister in his  speech stated that <em>&ldquo;The determination of residency of foreign company on the  basis of Place of Effective Management (POEM) is proposed to be deferred by one  year.&rdquo;<\/em> This is to be achieved by omitting clause (ii) of Section 4 of the  Finance Act 2015 with effect from <\/p>\n<p>\n  1-4-2016. The amendment to Finance Act 2015 is to be carried out vide Part XV  of the Finance Bill 2016. Thus, for assessment year 2016-17, the test of  residency for foreign companies continues to be on the touch stone of &ldquo;control  and management&rsquo;&rsquo; of its affairs.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The concept of POEM as introduced  by Finance Act 2015 had given rise to certain issues, to a company incorporated  outside India which had not earlier been assessed to tax in India. The issues  related to: <\/p>\n<p>\n  1. Applicability  of advance tax provisions;<\/p>\n<p>\n  2. Applicability  of withholding provisions; <\/p>\n<p>\n  3. Computation  of total income;<\/p>\n<p>\n  4. Computation  of depreciation when in earlier years foreign company has not been subject to  computation under the Act;<\/p>\n<p>\n  5.   Treatment of unabsorbed depreciation;<\/p>\n<p>\n  6.  Set off  or carried forward of losses;<\/p>\n<p>\n  7. Collection  and recovery of taxes;<\/p>\n<p>\n  8. Special  provisions relating to avoidance of tax;<\/p>\n<p>\n  9. Applicability  of Transfer Pricing provisions.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The Memorandum explaining the  provisions in the Finance Bill, 2015 had stated that, a set of guiding  principles to be followed in determination of POEM would be issued for the  benefit of the taxpayers as well as, tax administration. The Government  released draft guidelines on December 23, 2015 providing various factors  \/principles which would be considered in determining the POEM of a company. The  response to the guidelines by the stakeholders were to be received by a set  date, which was thereafter extended. The guidelines incorporating the responses  are not notified by the CBDT till date. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The Finance Act, 2015 received the  assent of the President on 14-05-2015. In effect, the amended Section 6(3) had  become applicable to the foreign companies for the financial year 2015-16. If  the revenue had to give effect to the amended law, it was imperative that the  guidelines spoken of in the memorandum were in place. <\/p>\n<p>\n  A foreign company, satisfying the  test of residency on the basis of POEM for the assessment year 2016-17, would  have been required to comply with various provisions of the Act attaching the  subject listed above. Non- compliance would have invited adverse consequences.  Problems would have aggravated if the company was held to be a resident under  the POEM test during the course of assessment. Such determination would have  been after the closure of the previous year inviting a non compliance of many  procedural <\/p>\n<p>\n  requirements. Representations were made before the Central Board of Taxes to  address the above issues. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The Government&rsquo;s stated goal is to  create a stable and consistence tax environment so as to give taxpayers  confidence in the tax regime. The Finance Minster on various occasions has  reiterated that the Government will not venture into retrospective taxation. <\/p>\n<p>\n  Adhering to the above principles  and in order to address the concerns raised, the Finance Minister in his Budget  2016-17 speech said that the determination of residency of foreign company on  the basis of Place of Effective Management (POEM) is proposed to be deferred by  one year i.e. to financial year starting from April 1, 2016. A transition  mechanism for a foreign company which is considered, for the first time, as a  resident in India under the POEM test is envisaged. The Memorandum to the  Finance Bill outlines the contours of the transitionary provisions.<\/p>\n<p>\n  Section 115JH is proposed to be  introduced to provide immunity to foreign companies from certain compliances if  such companies are held to be resident in India for the first time. Sub-Section  (1) of Section 115JH provides that the provisions relating to computation of  income, treatment of unabsorbed depreciation, set off or carry forward of  losses, collection and recovery and special provisions relating to avoidance of  tax shall apply with such modifications and exceptions as may be notified by  the Government. The modified\/transitional provisions would also apply to all  the intervening years upto the date of determination of POEM in assessment  proceedings. The <\/p>\n<p>\n  same has been explained through an illustration below: <\/p>\n<table border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"45\" valign=\"top\">\n<p>\n        <strong>Stage<\/strong> <\/td>\n<td width=\"471\" valign=\"top\">\n<p align=\"center\"><strong>Particulars<\/strong> <\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td width=\"73\" valign=\"top\">\n<p align=\"center\"><strong>Date<\/strong> <\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"45\" valign=\"top\">\n<p align=\"center\">I<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td width=\"471\" valign=\"top\">\n<p>Assessment proceedings for AY 18-19 commences by issue    of notice under Section 143(2)<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td width=\"73\" valign=\"top\">\n<p>28-9-2019<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"45\" valign=\"top\">\n<p align=\"center\">II<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td width=\"471\" valign=\"top\">\n<p>Order under Section 143(3) is passed concluding that    POEM of the company is in India. <\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td width=\"73\" valign=\"top\">\n<p>24-12-2020<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"589\" colspan=\"3\" valign=\"top\">\n<p><strong>Consequence:<\/strong> Transitional provisions would apply for AY 18-19, 19-20, 20-21    (For AY 2021-22, the transitional provisions would not apply despite the    assessment being completed during the course of the assessment year &ndash; Proviso    to Section 115JH(1).<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<p>The relief or the modified  provisions shall be applicable to the foreign company subject to compliance of  the conditions as may be notified. The conditions could be one time or could be  recurring. Default in compliance with conditions of the notification shall  result in re-computation of income as if the modified provisions\/transitional  provisions did not apply to these companies. The Assessing Officer is empowered  to invoke powers under Section 154. The period of four years for such  rectification shall be computed from the end of the previous year in which the  failure to comply with the notified conditions takes place. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The deferral of the POEM will give  the Government time to finalise the guidelines pursuant to further consultation  with stakeholders. The draft guidelines issued lack objectivity although the  stated attempt is to impart so. The guidelines leave a lot of scope for  mischief. Guidelines would now additionally have to cover the various topics  outlined. It is only after the final guidelines are in place that one may have  to determine whether they impart clarity or the cobwebs continue. The  persistence of rooms for doubt is likely to dampen the &ldquo;Ease of doing business&rdquo;  that the Government professes to accomplish. Such doubts are likely to discourage  people to wholeheartedly look to India as an investment destination. <\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>PART C: Introduction of BEPS into Indian  domestic law <\/p>\n<p>\n    [By: CA. Mohit A Parmar]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n  The Finance Minster in the Budget  for the year 2016-17 has initiated a process to incorporate, atleast partially,  the recommendations \/suggestions of Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS)  Action Plans 1,5 &amp;13. In July 2013, the Organisation for Economic  Co-operation and Development (OECD) published its &quot;Action Plan on  BEPS&quot;. This publication addressed the concerns of various stake holders  against the growing tax planning by multinational enterprises (MNEs) that makes  use of gaps in the interaction of different tax systems to artificially reduce  taxable income or shift profits to low-tax jurisdictions in which little or no  economic activity is performed. In its final report of October 2015, BEPS has  identified 15 Action Plans addressed them in a comprehensive manner, and set  deadlines to implement those actions. <\/p>\n<p>\n  India having been a keen  participant in the recommendations\/suggestions of the BEPS- Action Plans has  acted promptly to implement some of the recommended measures. A new Chapter  VIII is introduced in the Finance Bill, 2016 proposing an Equalisation Levy on  transactions in digital economy. This is following the suggestions of the OECD  in BEPS project under Action Plan 1. Secondly, a new Section 115BBF is  introduced to address taxation of patent developed and registered in India  following BEPS Action Plan 5. Thirdly, a new Section 286 is proposed to be inserted  for adoption of standardised approach to transfer pricing documentation  following the suggestions of BEPS Action Plan 13.<\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>BEPS  Action Plan&ndash;5 &ndash; Countering Harmful Tax Practices more Effectively, taking into  account Transparency and Substance <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n  In order to encourage indigenous  research and development (R&amp;D) activities and to make India a global R&amp;  D hub, the Finance Bill has proposed a concessional tax regime on any income by  way of royalty in respect of a patent developed and registered in India. The aim  of the concessional taxation regime is to provide an additional incentive for  companies to preserve and promote existing patents and to develop new  innovative patented products. This regime will motivate companies to establish  high income jobs in relation to development, manufacture and exploitation of  patents in India.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The concessional regime would align  the taxation of patents with the recommendation of the OECD. BEPS Action Plan 5  suggests the nexus approach and prescribes that income arising from exploitation  of Intellectual property (IP) should be attributed and taxed in the  jurisdiction where substantial research &amp; development (R&amp;D) activities  are undertaken rather than in the jurisdiction of legal ownership only. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The above stated reasons for the introduction  of &quot;Taxation of Income from Patents&quot; are emanating from the  memorandum explaining the provisions to Finance Bill 2016, the relevant extract  of which is as reproduced below- <\/p>\n<p>\n   <em>&quot;In  order to encourage indigenous research &amp; development activities and to make  India a global R&amp;D hub, the Government has decided to put in place a  concessional taxation regime for income from patents. <u>The aim of the concessional taxation regime is to provide an additional  incentive for companies to retain and commercialise existing patents and to  develop new innovative patented products<\/u>. This will encourage companies to  locate the high-value jobs associated with the development, manufacture and  exploitation of patents in India. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and  Development (OECD) has recommended, in Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS)  project under Action Plan 5, <u>the nexus approach  which prescribes that income arising from exploitation of Intellectual property  (IP) should be attributed and taxed in the jurisdiction where substantial  research &amp; development (R&amp;D) activities are undertaken rather than the  jurisdiction of legal ownership only<\/u>.&quot;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n  To achieve the above, a new Section  115BBF is proposed to be inserted to provide that any income by way of royalty  received in respect of a patent developed and registered in India shall be  taxable at a concessional rate of ten per cent (plus applicable surcharge and  cess).No expenditure or allowance in respect of such royalty income shall be  allowed. The income would thus be taxable on a gross basis.<\/p>\n<p>\n  To be entitled to this concessional  regime the taxpayer engaged in development of IP should be a resident in India  and also a true and first inventor of the invention, whose name is entered on  the patent register as the patentee in accordance with Patents Act, 1970. The  amendment is to be applicable from 1st April, 2017 and shall apply for  Assessment Year 2017-18 and onwards.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The concerns expressed in BEPS was  regarding preferential regimes being used for artificial profit shifting and  about a lack of transparency connected to certain rulings. To address these  concerns the Forum on Harmful Tax Practices (FHTP) was committed to frame a  methodology to define the substantial activity requirement to assess  preferential regimes, looking first at intellectual property (IP) regimes and  then other preferential regimes. The work of the FHTP was also to focus on  improving transparency through the compulsory and spontaneous exchange of  certain rulings that could give rise to BEPS concerns in the absence of such  exchanges.<\/p>\n<p>\n  As per the recommendations of the  BEPS- Action Plan 5, the substantial activity requirement to assess  preferential regimes should be strengthened in order to realign taxation of  profits with the substantial activities that generate them. The various  approaches considered were :-<\/p>\n<p>\n  a) Value  creation approach;<\/p>\n<p>\n  b) Transfer  pricing approach;<\/p>\n<p>\n  c) Nexus  approach.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The Indian Government has adopted  the &ldquo;nexus approach&rdquo;. In order to avail benefit under this approach the  taxpayer has to incur expenditure towards research and development that give  rise to the IP income.<\/p>\n<p>\n  Under the <strong><u>nexus approach<\/u><\/strong>, &#8216;expenditure&#8217; is used as factor for activity.  This approach is built on the principle that the taxpayer who is benefitted  should have carried out the research and development activity and has incurred  actual expenditure on such activities. This ensures that tax payer satisfies  the substantial activity requirement. These IP regimes are designed to  encourage R&amp;D activities and to foster growth and employment. <\/p>\n<p>\n  In the area of transparency, a  framework covering all rulings that could give rise to BEPS concerns in the  absence of compulsory spontaneous exchange has been agreed. The framework  covers six categories of rulings: (i) rulings related to preferential regimes;  (ii) cross-border unilateral advance pricing arrangements (APAs) or other  unilateral transfer pricing rulings; (iii) rulings giving a downward adjustment  to profits; (iv) permanent establishment (PE) rulings; (v) conduit rulings; and  (vi) any other type of ruling. <\/p>\n<p>\n  India has traditionally been known  for its imports in the area of technology or intellectual property rights. Our  service sector is largely engaged in the research and development activities on  behalf of the foreign principals. The efforts in the development of patent  happen in India, but the registrations are made outside India. In order to  encourage more Indian companies to develop and register these patents in India  the aforesaid amendments are proposed. As a result of this amendment, we could  see more research and development activities being conducted and more inventors  and patentee holders emerging in our country. However the success of this  change would to a large extent depend upon the IP protection norms in India. <\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>BEPS &ndash;  Action plan 13 &ndash; Transfer Pricing Documentation and Country-by &ndash; Country  Reporting <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n  BEPS -Action Plan 13 report  contains revised standards for transfer pricing documentation and a template for  Country-by-Country Reporting of income, taxes paid and certain measures of  economic activity. In this report, a three-tiered standardised approach to  transfer pricing documentation has been developed and suggested. Firstly,  multinational enterprises (MNEs) are to provide tax administrations with  high-level information regarding their global business operations and transfer  pricing policies in a &ldquo;master file&rdquo; that is to be available to all relevant tax  administrations. Secondly, transactional details are to be provided in a &ldquo;local  file&rdquo; specific to each country, identifying material related party  transactions, the amounts involved in those transactions, and the company&rsquo;s  analysis of the transfer pricing determinations made with regard to those  transactions. Thirdly, large MNEs are required to file a Country-by-Country  Report that will provide annually and for each tax jurisdiction in which they  do business the amount of revenue, profit before income tax and income tax paid  and accrued. This is driven by the need to have transparency on the part of  taxpayers in sharing all facts relevant to international transactions. In all  interactions Indian tax authorities have been indicating that they are serious  about implementing the suggestions by the OECD to the extent possible. <\/p>\n<p>\n  In line with the above  recommendations, a new Section 286 is proposed to be inserted requiring  maintenance and furnishing of the CbC report by multinational enterprises  (MNE&rsquo;s) having prescribed annual consolidated revenues. The salient features of  Section 286 are as follows:<\/p>\n<p>\n  i. The CbC  reporting requirement would mandatorily apply to multinational enterprise  (&#8216;MNE&#8217;) Group having annual consolidated revenues exceeding INR 5,395 crore  (equivalent to &euro; 750 million) in the previous year 2015-16<\/p>\n<p>\n  ii. The  resident parent entity of an MNE Group, would be required to furnish the CbC  report to the prescribed authority, on or before the due date of furnishing the  return of income.<\/p>\n<p>\n  iii. Every  constituent entity of an MNE Group having a non-resident parent entity, would  provide information regarding the country or territory of residence of the  parent entity<\/p>\n<p>\n  iv. The  Indian constituent would be required to furnish the CbC report to the  prescribed authority, if the parent entity is resident:<\/p>\n<p>\n  &ndash;  in a  country with which India does not have an arrangement for exchange of the CbC  report; or<\/p>\n<p>\n  &ndash;  in a  country which is not exchanging information with India even though there is an  agreement and this fact has been intimated to the entity by the prescribed  authority<\/p>\n<p>\n  v. In case  an MNE Group having a non-resident parent entity has designated an alternate  entity for filing the CbC report with the tax jurisdiction in which the  alternate entity is a resident, then the Indian constituent entities, would not  be under an obligation to furnish the CbC report, if the same can be obtained  under the agreement for exchange of such reports by the Indian tax authorities<\/p>\n<p>\n  vi. In case  there is more than one entity of the MNE Group in India (having a non-resident  parent entity), then the MNE Group can nominate in writing the entity which  would furnish the report on behalf of the MNE Group.<\/p>\n<p>\n  vii. The CbC  report would be required to be furnished in a prescribed manner and in the  prescribed form and would be based on the template provided in the OECD BEPS  report on Action Plan 13<\/p>\n<p>\n  viii. The  prescribed authority may also call for such document and information from the  entity furnishing the CbC report, for the purpose of verifying the accuracy, as  it may specify in the notice. In such cases, the entity would be under an  obligation to make the required submission within a period of thirty days from  the date of receipt of notice, which could be further extended by a period not  beyond thirty days.<\/p>\n<p>\n  The report mentions that taken  together, these three documents (country-by-country report, master file and  local file) will require taxpayers to articulate consistent transfer pricing  positions and will provide tax administrations with useful information to  assess transfer pricing risks. It will facilitate tax administrations to make  determinations about where the resources were effectively deployed, whether the  profits are consistent with the deployment of resources, and, in the event  audits are called for, provide information to commence and target audit  enquiries.<\/p>\n<p>\n  To ensure proper reporting of the  international group in compliance with Section 286, a new Section 271GB is  proposed to be inserted for levy of penalty where there is failure in  furnishing of such report. The quantum of penalty is ` 5,000 per day when the failure does  not exceed one month and the quantum would be ` 15,000 per day when the failure continues beyond a  period of one month.<\/p>\n<p>\n  Where the reporting entity fails to  produce information and documents sought by the prescribed authority within the  time allowed under Section 286, the penalty under Section 271GB could be levied  at ` 5,000 to ` 50,000 for every day of such  failure. For inaccurate information in the report furnished under Section  286(2) and if the entity fails to inform the incorrectness and furnish correct  report within a period of 15 days of such discovery, the prescribed authority  may impose a penalty of ` 5 lakhs. <\/p>\n<p>\n  <strong>BEPS Implementation:<\/strong> The CbC reporting requirement  Action 13 of BEPS Action Plan entails easy availability of information to tax  authorities and helps them to identify the risk areas in transfer pricing cases  and get an overview of the operations of multi-national groups. For this  reasons, the CbC reporting has been widely implemented by various jurisdictions  across the world. The amendments proposed in the Finance Bill, 2016 are to the  ease the work of tax authorities in the area of transfer pricing. Requirement  of furnishing this requisite information and reports before the due date of  filing return of income is likely to be an onerous compliance burden. The  burden of the penalties is also significant, especially considering that for  multinational groups having hundreds of group entities, the available  information may not technically meet the requirements of law. <\/p>\n<p>\n  The rules or forms in regard the transfer pricing law are  awaited. This Cbc reporting requirement apart from increasing the compliance  burden on the tax-payer; will add to increased costs. To expect fair  appreciation of such information from the tax department is to belie the  current reality and experience. There could be many reasons for an entity to  have a non-uniform transfer pricing practice across regions. This could be for  example the uniqueness of the business; diversified costs involved in a  transaction; differences in the volume of the transactions; and ease of doing  business among various jurisdictions. These unique features mandate a studied  approach by the revenue authorities. In India at least, from the current  experience whether this would happen is unlikely. Government is likely to use  information that is favourable to them and ignore the rest.<\/p>\n<p>\n  1. The  author is a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. The author acknowledges the contribution  rendered by his co-authors mentioned in the respective segments of this  write-up. <\/p>\n<p>\n  2. Source:  OECD\/G20 Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Project &#8211; 2015 Final Reports<\/p>\n<p>\n  3. In  Quill Corp. v. North Dakota 504 U.S. 298 (1992), the Supreme Court of USA ruled  that a business must have a physical presence in a state for that state to  require it to collect sales taxes. <\/p>\n<table width=\"100%\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"5\" cellspacing=\"0\" bgcolor=\"#FFFFCC\">\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Disclaimer: <\/strong>The  contents of this document are solely for informational purpose. It does not  constitute professional advice or a formal recommendation. While due care has  been taken in preparing this document, the existence of mistakes and omissions  herein is not ruled out. Neither the author nor itatonline.org and its  affiliates accepts any liabilities for any loss or damage of any kind arising  out of any inaccurate or incomplete information in this document nor for any  actions taken in reliance thereon. No part of this document should be  distributed or copied (except for personal, non-commercial use) without  express written permission of itatonline.org<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<div class=\"journal2\">Reproduced with permission from the AIFTP Journal<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>CA. P Shivanand Nayak, CA. Prem Raj Rathod and CA. Mohit A Parmar have conducted an expert analysis of the provisions in the Finance Bill 2016 relating to the imposition of Equalisation Levy, Place of Effective Management (POEM) and Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) and explained all of its implications in a simple and easy-to-understand format<\/p>\n<div class=\"read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/an-expert-analysis-of-international-tax-provisions-in-finance-bill-2016-relating-to-equalisation-levy-beps-and-poem\/\">Read more &#8250;<\/a><\/div>\n<p><!-- end of .read-more --><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2507","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2507","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2507"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2507\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2507"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2507"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2507"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}