Taxes That Could Hinder India’s Growth Story

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Taxes
That Could Hinder India’s Growth Story
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As India’s new Finance Minister, Arun Jaitley, took the oath of office administered by President Pranab Mukherjee, one wonders if the thought crossed his mind that one of the major problems he would be facing soon is the taxmen’s battles with foreign firms – a legacy handed down by the current President when he held the finance job.

Vodafone, IBM, Nokia and Shell are just some of the foreign majors embroiled in disputes with the Indian tax authorities. The sums involved are mindboggling –Vodafone is supposed to owe in the region of Rs 20,000 crore; Nokia has been hit with a Rs 2,400 crore tax claim; IBM has Rs 6,857 crore outstanding tax notice against it and Shell has been told it needs to pay an additional Rs 5,000 crore in taxes.

Corporate chieftains around the globe, who might have been thinking about investing in the country, were made to rethink. There have been other consequences and Singapore finally overtook Mauritius as the preferred destination for foreign investors to route their money through, because the former provides better legal protection in cases involving foreign tax liabilities.

For many observers, the genesis of these tax wars is the Vodafone dispute. When the Supreme Court decided in favour of the telecom major on whether it owed taxes to the Indian exchequer over its acquisition of the Indian operations of Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa, the then Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee went to the unprecedented extent of revising the tax laws to introduce a retrospective liability.
This, at a time, when India’s most important selling pitch against its ‘bigger and better’ rival China was that the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary system prevailed in the country unlike the wheeling and dealing that happened behind the bamboo curtain in China.

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Fast forward a few years and you found India’s economy in the doldrums – recording sub-5% GDP growth. The long-term consequences of India’s tax adventurism are certainly being felt even now. The new BJP government has two courses it can pursue. One is to introduce more clarity and transparency in laws governing areas like transfer pricing and M&A, which typically bedevil foreign investments. The other is to speed up the arbitration proceedings in cases like Vodafone, which got completely tangled up in the previous government’s larger dysfunction.

Unfortunately, once the precedent has been set and it has been proved that the Indian government can go to the extent of changing laws retrospectively to get its way, it could be extremely difficult to convince investors that similar instances will not take place in the future. And the same applies for the industries, especially when laws like the Land Acquisition Act was pushed through by the UPA government. It is obvious that the Pandora’s Box can easily open if governments have an agenda to pursue.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inherits a fragile fiscal situation and he will have to consult with Jaitley (the latter has to present the new Budget) whether making major tax concessions is possible in the present state of government finances.

As the BJP must have found out during its poll campaign, it is easier to make ambitious promises in the heat of the battle, like its proposal to abolish income tax, than implement them when the time arrives.

Maverick leaders of the BJP, such as Subramanian Swamy, who went to town against the UPA’s tax terrorism, do not find a place in the new government. Instead, Jaitley’s background as a high profile lawyer might provide just the skills he needs as he tries to untangle the legal wrangles that the policies of the previous regime has left for him to deal with.
Image: Thinkstock
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