Deccan Chronicle

Babus say taxes are fair, but royalty payments are high

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New Delhi, Sept. 17: Auto companies should cut costs by reducing royalty payments to their parent companies abroad instead of asking the government to reduce GST, finance ministry sources said on Thursday, responding to criticism on high taxes in India.

Most globally establishe­d companies in the sector have flourished in the current taxation and regulatory regime, which is evident from the huge royalty payouts made by Indian partners to their foreign parent firms, they added.

Toyota Motor Corp is not looking at further expansion in India due to the country's high taxes, the firm's vice chairman of India unit Shekar Viswanatha­n had said in an interview this week.

Finance ministry sources said India's tax policy on the automobile sector has been quite consistent for the last three decades, in the form of allowing foreign investment and incentivis­ing domestic manufactur­ing.

GST rates on automobile­s are less than what VAT and excise duty rates used to be in the pre-GST times. All of a sudden, dissent in some quarters on tax rates on automobile­s is surprising, they added.

"These companies should cut down their costs of manufactur­ing by cutting down the royalty payments to their parent companies abroad instead of asking the government to reduce GST," a source said.

Taxes on automobile­s are in the highest bracket across the globe without much exception, the sources said.

Japan currently has three types of taxes on automobile­s— once on the purchase, then an annual automobile tax based on engine size, and finally a weight tax at inspection­s required once every two years. Over and above this, there is GST at the highest end of the applicable rates, they said.

Also, in the EU, the base rate for VAT/GST on automobile­s ranges from 20 per cent to 25 per cent.

The UK charges vehicle excise duties which vary with car emission norms and has 14 rate slabs.

Besides, there are road usage charges. High parking charges are common across the globe, they said.

Sources said vehicles, based on their high preGST incidence, were placed in the 28 per cent GST slab.

Passenger vehicles also attract compensati­on cess ranging from 1 to 22 per cent. But even with this, the tax rate has not gone beyond pre-GST levels, except in few cases which were enjoying certain duty concession­s, they added.

"Most of the countries provide certain concession­s to electric vehicles. Given this, it would be unfair to claim that the GST rates are a demand dampener," one source said.

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