{"id":8139,"date":"2020-07-17T09:31:42","date_gmt":"2020-07-17T04:01:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/?p=8139"},"modified":"2020-07-17T09:31:42","modified_gmt":"2020-07-17T04:01:42","slug":"selection-of-tested-party-for-the-purpose-of-transfer-pricing-an-issue-which-requires-consideration-of-a-special-bench","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/selection-of-tested-party-for-the-purpose-of-transfer-pricing-an-issue-which-requires-consideration-of-a-special-bench\/","title":{"rendered":"Selection Of Tested Party For The Purpose Of Transfer Pricing, An Issue Which Requires Consideration Of A Special Bench"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-content\/uploads\/PC-Yadav.png\" alt=\"PC-Yadav\" width=\"75\" height=\"100\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-7898\" \/><strong>Advocate P. C. Yadav has pointed out there is presently a conflict of opinion amongst the various Benches of the Tribunal as to the correct interpretation of the term &#8220;<em>tested party<\/em>&#8221; in the Transfer Pricing regulations read with the OECD Guidelines. The ld. author has explained the genesis of the conflict and requested that it should be resolved speedily, preferably by a judgement of the Special Bench <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. In my earlier Article,  I have deliberated on the selection of most appropriate method for computing  the ALP of an international transaction or international transactions. Now upon  the huge demand of my followers and loved ones I am making this Article, which  is the next step in Transfer pricing and plays an important role in studying  the Transfer Pricing law. This is known as selection of the tested party in an  international transaction. <\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>2. So far as the selection  of tested party is concerned, it is of utter importance to identify the entity  that is to be the point of reference or known as &ldquo;tested party&rdquo;, since the  entire transfer pricing exercise is based only on comparing the margin etc. of  the &lsquo;tested party&rsquo; with the average margin of comparables. The exercise of  selection of tested party would always precede the process of selection of  comparables. Because the whole purpose of the TP study is to test check the  credibility of the profits of &lsquo;tested party&rsquo;. Though Transfer Pricing  regulations (TPR) do not lay down any specific procedure or guidelines vis-a-vis the  selection of the tested party, yet there are some guiding factors which are  present in OECD and US, TPR. <\/p>\n<p>3. The OECD guidelines  provide that a tested party ought to be the enterprise that offers a higher  degree of comparability vis-a-vis uncontrolled transaction. This is one line of  thinking. Para-3.18 of OECD guidelines is extracted hereunder for the ease of  reference.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;The choice of the tested  party should be consistent with the functional analysis of the transaction. As  a general rule, the tested party is the one to which a transfer pricing method  can be applied in the most reliable manner and for which the most reliable  comparables can be found, i.e. it will most often be the one that has the less  complex functional analysis.&rdquo; <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>4. A perusal of the above  guidelines when read with the judgment rendered by the Indian Courts, it  emerges clearly that the entire thrust of the OECD guidelines vis-v-vis tested  party is that it should be least complex party.&nbsp;  Relevant Judgments wherein this interpretation has been upheld by the  various India Courts are referred hereunder in subsequent Para(s). <\/p>\n<p>5. The US  Treasury Regulations as envisaged under 1.482 is reproduced hereunder, which  defined &ldquo;tested party&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;The tested party will be  the participant in the controlled transaction whose operating profit  attributable to the controlled transactions can be verified using the most  reliable data and requiring the fewest and most reliable adjustments, and for  which reliable data regarding the uncontrolled comparables can be located.  Consequently in most cases the tested party will be least complex of the  controlled taxpayers and will not own valuable intangibles property or unique  assets that distinguish it from potential uncontrolled comparables&rdquo;<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>6. A perusal of the US  regulations would show that in addition to the feature of being least complex  party, a further rider that is ownership of intangibles or unique assets is  also to be considered and the parties who have huge intangibles would required  to be excluded since the presence of intangible asset makes them complex  parties. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>7. Under the provisions of  Indian Income Tax Act, to understand the concept of &ldquo;tested party&rdquo; one has to  look at the provisions of section 92B of the Act and rule 10B (1) the Rules. <\/p>\n<p>8. The provisions of  Section 92B of the Act are as under:-<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;(1)  For the purposes of this section and&nbsp;sections 92,&nbsp;92C,&nbsp;92D&nbsp;and&nbsp;92E,  &quot;international transaction&quot; means a transaction between two or more  associated enterprises, either or both of whom are non-residents, in the nature  of purchase, sale or lease of tangible or intangible property, or provision of  services, or lending or borrowing money, or any other transaction having a  bearing on the profits, income, losses or assets of such enterprises, and shall  include a mutual agreement or arrangement between two or more associated  enterprises for the allocation or apportionment of, or any contribution to, any  cost or expense incurred or to be incurred in connection with a benefit,  service or facility provided or to be provided to any one or more of such  enterprises.<\/p>\n<p>(2)  A transaction entered into by an enterprise with a person other than an  associated enterprise shall, for the purposes of sub-section (1), be deemed to  be an international transaction entered into between two associated  enterprises, if there exists a prior agreement in relation to the relevant  transaction between such other person and the associated enterprise, or the  terms of the relevant transaction are determined in substance between such  other person and the associated enterprise where the enterprise or the  associated enterprise or both of them are non-residents irrespective of whether  such other person is a non-resident or not.<\/p>\n<p>    <em>Explanation.<\/em>&mdash;For the removal of doubts, it is hereby  clarified that&mdash;<br \/>\n  &nbsp;&nbsp;(<em>i<\/em>) the expression &quot;international  transaction&quot; shall include&mdash;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>a<\/em>) the purchase, sale, transfer, lease or use  of tangible property including building, transportation vehicle, machinery,  equipment, tools, plant, furniture, commodity or any other article, product or  thing;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>b<\/em>) the purchase, sale, transfer, lease or  use of intangible property, including the transfer of ownership or the  provision of use of rights regarding land use, copyrights, patents, trademarks,  licences, franchises, customer list, marketing channel, brand, commercial  secret, know-how, industrial property right, exterior design or practical and  new design or any other business or commercial rights of similar nature;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>c<\/em>) capital financing, including any type of  long-term or short-term borrowing, lending or guarantee, purchase or sale of  marketable securities or any type of advance, payments or deferred payment or  receivable or any other debt arising during the course of business;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>d<\/em>) provision of services, including  provision of market research, market development, marketing management,  administration, technical service, repairs, design, consultation, agency,  scientific research, legal or accounting service;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>e<\/em>) a transaction of business restructuring  or reorganisation, entered into by an enterprise with an associated enterprise,  irrespective of the fact that it has bearing on the profit, income, losses or  assets of such enterprises at the time of the transaction or at any future  date;<br \/>\n  &nbsp;(<em>ii<\/em>) the expression &quot;intangible  property&quot; shall include&mdash;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>a<\/em>) marketing related intangible assets,  such as, trademarks, trade names, brand names, logos;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>b<\/em>) technology related intangible assets,  such as, process patents, patent applications, technical documentation such as  laboratory notebooks, technical know-how;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>c<\/em>) artistic related intangible assets, such  as, literary works and copyrights, musical compositions, copyrights, maps,  engravings;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>d<\/em>) data processing related intangible  assets, such as, proprietary computer software, software copyrights, automated  databases, and integrated circuit masks and masters;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>e<\/em>) engineering related intangible assets,  such as, industrial design, product patents, trade secrets, engineering drawing  and schema-tics, blueprints, proprietary documentation;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>f<\/em>) customer related intangible assets, such  as, customer lists, customer contracts, customer relationship, open purchase  orders;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>g<\/em>) contract related intangible assets, such  as, favourable supplier, contracts, licence agreements, franchise agreements,  non-compete agreements;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>h<\/em>) human capital related intangible assets,  such as, trained and organised work force, employment agreements, union  contracts;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>i<\/em>) location related intangible assets, such  as, leasehold interest, mineral exploitation rights, easements, air rights,  water rights;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>j<\/em>) goodwill related intangible assets, such  as, institutional goodwill, professional practice goodwill, personal goodwill  of professional, celebrity goodwill, general business going concern value;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>k<\/em>) methods, programmes, systems,  procedures, campaigns, surveys, studies, forecasts, estimates, customer lists,  or technical data;<br \/>\n  &nbsp; (<em>l<\/em>) any other similar item that derives its  value from its intellectual content rather than its physical attributes.<\/p>\n<p>9. The mechanism for  determining the ALP under the TNM method has been enshrined in clause (e) of rule 10B(1), which runs  as under :<\/p>\n<p>    <em>&#8216;(i) the net profit margin realised by the enterprise from  an international transaction entered into with an associated enterprise is  computed in relation to costs incurred or sales effected or assets employed or  to be employed by the enterprise or having regard to any other relevant base ;<\/em> <br \/>\n    <em>(ii) the net profit margin realised by the enterprise or by  an unrelated enterprise from a comparable uncontrolled transaction or a number  of such transactions is computed having regard to the same base ;<\/em> <br \/>\n    <em>(iii) the net profit margin referred to in sub-clause (ii)  arising in comparable uncontrolled transactions is adjusted to take into  account the differences, if any, between the international transaction and the  comparable uncontrolled transactions, or between the enterprises entering into  such transactions, which could materially affect the amount of net profit  margin in the open market ;<\/em> <br \/>\n    <em>(iv) the net profit margin realised by the enterprise and  referred to in sub-clause (i) is established to be the same as the net profit  margin referred to in sub-clause (iii) ;<\/em> <br \/>\n    <em>(v) the net profit margin thus established is then taken  into account to arrive at an arm&#8217;s length price in relation to the  international transaction.&#8217;<\/em> <\/p>\n<p>    <strong>10. The land mark cases on the issue of selection of tested party are  as under:- <\/strong><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\"><em>Gyr Limited (ITA Nos  I.TA No. 37\/Kol\/2012, Assessment Year: 2007-08, &amp; I.TA No. 1623\/Ko1\/2012 =<strong> <\/strong><\/em><strong><em>2016-TII-419-ITAT-KOL-TP<\/em><\/strong> :- <em>&nbsp;the Associated Enterprises of the assessee should be selected as  tested party to the transaction, as being the least complex entity.<\/em><\/span><\/li>\n<p><\/p>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\"><em>General Motors India  Private Limited, in I.T.A. Nos. 3096\/Ahd\/2010 and 3308\/Ahd\/2011 = <\/em><strong><em>2013-TII-162-ITAT-AHM-TP<\/em><\/strong><\/span><strong><em>,<\/em><\/strong> wherein the tribunal has concluded that the foreign AE should be  considered as the tested party being the least complex of the transacting  entities and has relied on the UN TP Manual and various judicial precedents on  this issue<\/li>\n<p><\/p>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\"><em><strong>Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd. v. Additional Commissioner of Income-tax,  Range-15. New Delhi [110 ITD 428] =&nbsp;<\/strong>(<\/em><strong>2008-TIOL-75-ITAT-DEL<\/strong><em><strong>)&nbsp;wherein the ld. Tribunal held that, &quot;that ld. CIT  failed to appreciate that under the transfer pricing mechanism &quot;tested  party&quot; out of two parties of a multinational involved in the transaction,  that least complex party not owning intangible assets is to be taken as a  tested party. The taxpayer had placed sufficient material on record to show that  taxpayer was a complex party whereas other associated enterprises were less  complex&#8230;.<\/strong><\/em><\/span><\/li>\n<p><\/p>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\">Development Consultant Private Limited reported in <\/span><strong>2008-TIOL-150-ITAT-KOL<\/strong><strong>:- It has been held that <\/strong>it is first necessary to select the &#8216;tested party&#8217; and  the tested party will be the least complex of the controlled taxpayer and will  not own valuable intangible property or unique assets that distinguish it from  potential uncontrolled comparables. The ITAT has accepted the selection of  overseas affiliate as the tested party. <\/li>\n<p><\/p>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\">Global Vantedge Private Ltd 2008- TIOL 24-( By <strong><em>late<\/em><\/strong> <strong><em>C. L.  Sethi Jee<\/em> one of the stalwart of the ITAT<\/strong>):- It has been held  that FAR should be given due importance for comparability and selection of the  tested party would be normally the least complex entity provided sufficient  reliable data is available.<\/span><\/li>\n<p><\/p>\n<li><span dir=\"ltr\">Recently Hon&rsquo;ble  Kolkata Tribunal in the case of <\/span><strong>ALMATIS  ALUMINA PVT LTD ITA No 726 of 2017 dated 16.04.2019<\/strong> has held that since the AE is least complex party the assessee is  correct in choosing the same as tested party&nbsp; <\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>11. In all above cases it  has been unanimously held that the least complex party is to be taken as tested  party. However story does not end here, Pune bench of the ITAT recently in the  case of Eaton Industrial in ITA No 505 of 2015 reported in <strong><u>2020-<\/u><\/strong><strong><u>TII<\/u><\/strong><strong><u>-154-ITAT-PUNE-TP<\/u><\/strong> has observed as under, after considering the provisions of Indian  Transfer Pricing has observed as under:-<\/p>\n<p><em>&ldquo; A  tested party is a party in whose hands a transaction between the two related  enterprises is tested vis-&agrave;-vis other comparable uncontrolled transactions for  ensuring that is not structured in such a way so as to deprive the Indian  exchequer of the rightful tax due to it. In case, profit rate of the tested  party turns out to be less on a comparative analysis, then subject to other  provisions, an upward increase in the profit of the Indian entity is made pro  tanto. Now the question arises as to whether the foreign\/Associated  Enterprise(s) <strong><u>can be considered as  tested party or only the Indian entity<\/u><\/strong>, which has recorded the  transaction in its books of account, can be so considered.(Para13)<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>12. Thereafter Hon&rsquo;ble Bench has referred to section 92B, and Rule  clause(e) of Rule 10B(1) and held as under:-<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>&ldquo;Provisions  of the Chapter-X of the Act with the caption &quot;Special Provisions Relating  to Avoidance of Tax&quot; dealing with the computation of income from  international transactions having regard to ALP. Section 92(1) of the Act  provides that : &#8216;Any income arising from an international transaction shall be  computed having regard to the arm&#8217;s length price&#8217;. Thus, this provision applies  to income of an enterprise from an international transaction, which is  chargeable to tax under the Act. The term &quot;international transaction&quot;  has been defined in section 92B to mean &#8216;a transaction between two or more  associated enterprises, either or both of whom are non-residents, in the nature  of purchase &hellip; of tangible &hellip;. property&#8230;..&#8217;. The methodology for computation of  arm&#8217;s length price of an international transaction has been set out in section  92C(1) of the Act to be as per any of the prescribed methods, including the <\/em><em>TNM<\/em><em> method&rdquo; (para14) <\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>It  has been further observed in <\/strong><strong>Para<\/strong><strong> (15), which in my opinion a must read <\/strong><strong>Para<\/strong><strong> to understand the concept  of Transfer pricing, what is Enterprises, what is Associated Enterprises and  how these terms are related to expression &ldquo;tested party&rdquo; <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>&ldquo;The  term &#8216;enterprise&#8217; under the <\/em><em>TNM<\/em><em> method, <strong><u>and  for that matter all other methods, has been used to indicate the assessee in  whose hands the benchmarking of the international transaction is done and the  term &#8216;associated enterprise&#8217; has been used to denote the foreign\/AE, being the  other related party to the international transaction<\/u><\/strong>. It is so borne  out from rule 10B(1)(b)(i) under the <strong>Resale  price method<\/strong>, which provides that : &#8216;the price at which property purchased  &hellip;. by the <strong>enterprise<\/strong> from an  associated enterprise is resold&hellip;is identified&#8217;. As this method is usually  applied in the hands of the party purchasing the goods and then reselling it,  there remains no doubt that the term <strong>&#8216;enterprise&#8217;  has been used for the Indian assessee purchasing the goods for resale and the  term &#8216;associated enterprise&#8217; has been used for a seller foreign\/AE<\/strong>. Coming  back to the TNM method, rule 10B(1)(e)(i) provides that the <strong><u>net profit margin &#8216;realised by the  enterprise&#8217; from an international transaction entered into &#8216;with an associated  enterprise&#8217; is computed in relation to costs incurred or sales effected or  assets employed or to be employed by the enterprise or having regard to any  other relevant base, which is then compared with the net profit margin realized  by the enterprise or by an unrelated enterprise from a comparable uncontrolled transaction.  The modus operandi of determining the ALP of an international transaction under  this method is that, firstly, the profit rate realized or earned by the  assessee from a transaction with its AE is determined (say, profit A), which is  then compared with the adjusted rate of profit of comparable cases (say, profit  B) so as to ascertain if &#8216;profit A&#8217; is at arm&#8217;s length vis-&agrave;-vis &#8216;profit B&#8217;. If  it is not, then, an addition on account of transfer pricing adjustment, subject  to other provisions, is made in the hands of the assessee having regard to the  difference between the rates of profit A and profit B. The rate of profit of  comparable cases (profit B) may be computed from internally or externally  comparable cases, depending upon the FAR analysis and the facts and  circumstances of each case. Thus the calculation of &#8216;profit B&#8217; may undergo  change with the varying set of comparable cases. However, insofar as  calculation of &#8216;profit A&#8217; is concerned, the same has to necessarily result in  the hands of the assessee-enterprise (Indian entity) only from the transaction  between two or more associated enterprises, as is the mandate of section 92  read with section 92B in juxtaposition to rule 10B<\/u><\/strong>. (<strong>Emphasis required<\/strong>)The natural corollary  which, ergo, follows is that under no situation can the calculation of &#8216;profit  A&#8217; be substituted with anything other than the profit realized or earned by the  assessee-enterprise from the international transaction. So, under the <\/em><em>TNM<\/em><em> method, it is the net  profit margin realized by the Indian assessee-enterprise from the transaction  with its foreign\/AE, which is compared with that of the comparables. There can  be no question of substituting the profit realized by the Indian enterprise  with the profit realized by the foreign\/AE for the purpose of determining the  ALP of the international transaction of the Indian enterprise with its foreign  AE. Scope of transfer pricing addition under the Indian taxation law is limited  to transaction between the assessee and its foreign\/ AE. We fail to comprehend  as to how the profit realized by the foreign\/AE can be relevant, when the  profit of the Indian enterprise is sought to be ensured at ALP. The underlying  object of the transfer pricing provisions is, inter alia, to see that there is  no profit shifting from the Indian taxation base by means of the foreign\/AE  charging more than that charged by comparable independent cases, which fact is  ensured by determining the ALP of the international transaction. If foreign\/AE  has, in fact, charged more, then its profit rate will shoot up and the  corresponding profit of the Indian enterprise will be squeezed. In that  scenario, a comparison of the profit rate of the foreign\/AE will run contrary  to the mandate of the provisions. Whereas, we were required to determine if the  profit charged by the foreign\/AE is not more than that charged by uncontrolled  comparables by seeing the profit rate of the Indian enterprise, we will end up  doing a futile exercise of rather viewing the profit rate of the foreign\/AE, if  such foreign\/AE is taken as a tested party for the purposes of comparison with  the profit rate of the comparables. Suppose the foreign\/AE has charged more,  then its profit rate will turn out to be higher, which when compared with the  lower rate of profit margin of foreign comparables, will show the transaction  at ALP, calling for no transfer pricing adjustment. This exercise is not only  off the mark, but also runs counter to the rule and spirit of the transfer  pricing provisions. Therefore as per the provisions of section 92 the tested  party would always be the Indian Enterprises<\/em>.&rdquo;(<strong>Para-15<\/strong>)<\/p>\n<p><strong>13. The above ruling is in contrast to the other rulings on the  subject, as in all other cases it has been held that least complex party would  have to be selected as tested party be it AE or Indian Entity. Therefore now  two views are there on this issue and hence unless any High Court would resolve  it or a special bench is constituted the issue would be debatable. <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>14. With this I would end my Article and made a humble request to  all my seniors and fellow colleagues that please comment on my article and give  your esteemed suggestions so that I would improve my next article, which would  be on selection of Comparables. <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>15. At last the above Article is dedicated to my seniors and  stalwart members of the ITAT like late Shri C. L. Sethi (JM) late Shri Vimal  Gandhi (JM), Shri P.K. Bansal (AM), Shri IC Sudhir (JM), Shri Abhrahim Gorege  (AM) all are retired now. <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>16. I would also thankful to <\/strong><strong>AIF<\/strong><strong>TP a unique organisation  of <\/strong><strong>India<\/strong><strong> and plays an important  role in the Administration as well as adjudication of Indian Tax laws. <\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"right\"><strong><em>Jai Hind Jai Bharat&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<table width=\"103%\" 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","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Advocate P. C. Yadav has pointed out there is presently a conflict of opinion amongst the various Benches of the Tribunal as to the correct interpretation of the term &#8220;<em>tested party<\/em>&#8221; in the Transfer Pricing regulations read with the OECD Guidelines. The ld. author has explained the genesis of the conflict and requested that it should be resolved speedily, preferably by a judgement of the Special Bench<\/p>\n<div class=\"read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/selection-of-tested-party-for-the-purpose-of-transfer-pricing-an-issue-which-requires-consideration-of-a-special-bench\/\">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-8139","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\/8139","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=8139"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8139\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=8139"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=8139"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=8139"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}