Business Standard

Google tax collection nearly doubles in FY21

- DILASHA SETH

Equalisati­on levy or the socalled Google tax collection nearly doubled in FY21 compared to the previous fiscal year as the government expanded its scope to cover non-resident e-commerce operators.

This comes in the backdrop of the US proposing retaliator­y tariffs of up to 25 per cent against New Delhi on a slew of products, including shrimps, basmati rice and gold, among others.

The digital levy, aimed to tax non-resident e-commerce operators, saw collection­s touch ~2,057 crore in FY21 after the last installmen­t deadline of April 7, against ~1,136 crore collected in the same period last year, according to government sources. This suggests a growth of 81 per cent on a yearon-year (YOY) basis in Google tax collection­s in FY21.

India’s informatio­n technology hub Bengaluru accounted for half of the overall equalisati­on levy mop up at ~1,020 crore. Hyderabad, which houses large IT players, accounted for a quarter of the collection­s at ~538 crore. It was followed by Delhi and Mumbai with ~323 crore and ~134 crore collection­s, respective­ly.

“Equalisati­on levy collection­s increase is on expected lines. But the idea here is not collection­s, but bringing foreign entities under the tax net in India. They make large earnings from users in India but do not have a physical presence here. The levy is only an interim measure. We are awaiting a multilater­al deal at the OECD (Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t) on digital taxes,” said a government official.

While overall net direct tax collection­s were down 10 per cent in FY21, the pandemic year, Bengaluru, India’s IT hub, posted a 7.3 per cent growth, latest data showed.

The levy applied only to digital advertisin­g services till 2019-20 at the rate of 6 per cent. However, the government, in April last year, widened the scope to impose a 2 per cent tax on non-resident e-commerce players with a turnover of ~2 crore. It covers players, including Facebook, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Adobe, Uber, Udemy, Zoom.us, Expedia, Alibaba, Ikea, Linkedin, Spotify and ebay.

Rajat Mohan, partner, AMRG Associates, said, “Besides widening scope of the levy, the pandemic and social distancing norms last year led to a surge in their business, resulting in higher taxes. All the digital businesses are set up in metro cities. So, the tax mop up from these cities is bound to increase.”

Meanwhile, the US — in its Section 301 report — held that India’s digital tax of 2 per cent on technology majors is unreasonab­le, burdensome, and discrimina­tory against Amazon, Google and Facebook. It has invited comments on the proposal on retaliator­y tariffs against India by April 30. The public hearing is scheduled for May 10. In fact, India further expanded its scope by way of clarificat­ions in the Finance Act 2021-22. It will cover e-commerce supply or service when any activity takes place online.

Sandeep Jhunjhunwa­la, partner, Nangia Andersen LLP, said, “…the levy has raised multiple questions and ambiguitie­s with regard to its boundless scope and applicabil­ity. The government has provided certain clarificat­ions recently, but the scope of the levy has the potential to cover any transactio­n conducted through a digital or online platform. The ~2,058 crore of digital taxes collected during FY21 vis-à-vis ~1,136 crore collected during FY20 reflect a marked growth for an economy ridden by the pandemic.”

Jhunjhunwa­la added that multinatio­nals were increasing­ly reviewing their business activities in India. and FY22 would be a crucial year for observing the collection­s from the equalisati­on levy, “as the government is determined on tapping the colossal digital markets.” Besides, the levy would apply to gross considerat­ion and not just the commission earned, leading to an outcry from industry.

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ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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