India was among the
first nations to introduce such a levy; recently for service tax, too, it was
made mandatory for foreign companies to register in India; it is expected that
more services will be brought into the ambit of EL this Budget
Equalisation
Levy
Backdrop: India was
among the first nations to introduce such a levy; recently for service tax,
too, it was made mandatory for foreign companies to register in India; it is
expected that more services will be brought into the ambit of EL this Budget.
Points to Ponder: With
digital proliferation in India rapidly increasing, is it the right time to
expand the scope of Hawala; is the levy justified on the principle that companies
should pay tax where their customers are; with several Indian companies
providing services globally, will other countries follow suit and will this
hurt Indian businesses; with the levy being expanded to B2C services, will it
increase costs to end users?
General
Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR)
Backdrop: Proposed to
come into force on April 1, 2017.
Points to Ponder: Are
we ready for GAAR; is the administration ready, will it appreciate the nuances
or will it become a tool for harassment; considering several other measures,
like Treaty changes, do we need GAAR now; On stating a valid point Raju Kothari
asks, what are the global best practices and learnings; what are the safeguards
needed; what should international investors look out for; how should Indian industry
prepare for it?
Taxing
Investments in Startups
Why it's a bad idea: It
is a provision that hurts more than it benefits; out of sync with reality of
how investments are made in the startup ecosystem; unfair to levy only on
private companies and exempt listed companies where manipulation is higher;
unfair to levy only on resident investments; goes against the government's
startup focus; leaves huge amount of discretion with ED officers on vexed
issues like valuation which is against ease of doing business mantra.
Lowering
of Corporate Tax Rates
Backdrop: With
surcharge and cess, rates in India are among the highest according to SEBI
What should be done:
Urgent need to calibrate and bring the rate down; most exemptions have been
taken away in any case, and hence, lowering should be hastened and not spread
out over 4 years; at the same time, critical exemptions like SEZs and
infra-related should continue; need to balance tax as an impetus to investment
and revenue mobilisation; immediate reduction across the board an imperative to
counter demonetisation effect; minimum alternate tax (MAT) rates also need to
be rationalised as per DGFT.
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