Deccan Chronicle

Dividend tax burden may shift to investors

■ Impact of DDT prompting firms to invest in debt

- SHRUTI SRIVASTAVA

In a bid to goad companies to boost spending and revive foreign fund inflows, India is considerin­g changes to its dividend distributi­on tax, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The budget statement due February may include a proposal to tax dividends once they are paid to shareholde­rs, rather than the current system where the company pays the levy, the people said, asking not to be identified as the deliberati­ons are private.

The move would be the latest in a series of steps from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to prop up growth from the lowest in six years. Over recent months, authoritie­s have slashed corporate taxes, rolled back a levy on global funds, injected $10 billion into struggling state banks, and eased foreign investment rules to encourage companies to boost spending.

The impact of the dividend tax has been prompting firms to invest in debt

“thereby depriving companies of much-needed equity,” to expand, said Daksha Baxi, Mumbaibase­d head of internatio­nal taxation at law firm Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas. For investors the tax meant they can’t take credit “for taxes paid by Indian companies and secondly, their tax incidence goes up.”

A spokesman for the Finance Ministry couldn’t be immediatel­y reached for comment. The move is among recommenda­tions of a government-appointed panel, media reports said earlier.

Indian companies need to pay 15 per cent tax on dividends declared, which rises past 20 per cent once surcharges are added. Investors, who are also taxed on their earnings, have protested these multiple levies.

The dividend tax brings distributi­on about Rs

60,000 crore to the exchequer each year and the planned changes won’t affect collection­s, the people said.

Share of gross fixed capital formation in India’s GDP has been falling as companies have refrained from investing. The measure stood at 29.7 per cent in the June quarter, hovering near the record low of

27.9 per cent.

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