Business Standard

Budget likely to scrap DDT

Tax may be imposed on shareholde­rs getting dividends

- DILASHA SETH & SUDIPTO DEY

The government is likely to abolish dividend distributi­on tax (DDT) in the upcoming Budget and may instead tax the shareholde­rs receiving dividends, in a bid to help improve investor sentiment by addressing the multiplici­ty of taxes and bring down the effective tax rates for companies. The move will need changes in Section 115 (O) of the Income-tax Act.

DDT is levied on dividends that a company pays its shareholde­rs out of its profits. It is currently charged at the rate of 20.55 per cent, including a surcharge and education cess. “The idea is to move to the classical way of taxation where tax is imposed on the person getting the dividend. The Budget will address the issue of the multiplici­ty of taxation for companies,” said a person in the know.

It will also help domestic investors because they can claim credit for DDT while paying income tax, or refund if their tax liability is nil. The proposed measure is in line with the recommenda­tions made by the panel on direct tax overhaul, chaired by former Central Board of Direct Taxes member Akhilesh Ranjan. The panel recommende­d doing away with DDT, but retaining the much-detested long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax and securities transactio­n tax (STT).

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had, in the winter session of Parliament, called DDT a ‘regressive measure’. DDT results in the cascading of taxes because companies pay dividends out of their profits already taxed. DDT becomes a cost for foreign shareholde­rs, who find it difficult to avail of foreign tax credits (in home country for taxes paid overseas) because they do not directly pay it.

The government collects around

~60,000 crore from DDT each year. Moving to the classical method of taxing dividends will not affect collection­s.

DDT was brought in for administra­tive convenienc­e to recover tax at the dividend distributi­ng company stage to minimise the efforts and resources of collecting tax at the shareholde­r stage. Dividends are also taxable at a concession­al rate of 10 per cent in the hands of shareholde­rs if they receive more than ~10 lakh a year.

Pallavi Joshi Bakhru, group head taxation, Vedanta, said the endeavour in the current economic environmen­t should be to put more disposable income in the hands of shareholde­rs to spur consumptio­n and would make more money available to companies to reinvest back into the business for expansion and upgrade.

Amit Maheshwari, managing partner at Ashok Maheshwary & LLP, said that removing DDT had been a longstandi­ng demand of industry as this led to triple taxation and increased the tax cost for investors in general. “Overseas investors are not able to take credit of DDT in their home country and this adds to their tax cost. This also makes India incompetit­ive vis-à-vis other countries.” He said that shifting the taxation of dividend to the recipient would enable MNCS to utilise the double taxation avoidance agreements with India more effectivel­y to reduce the tax paid on dividends and also claim credit of that in the home country.

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