The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

STAGE SET FOR NEXT-GEN TAX REFORMS

It remains to be seen if India will reconsider its stand on internatio­nal arbitratio­n in tax treaties

- MUKESH BUTANI

Edit It remains to be seen if India will reconsider its stand on internatio­nal arbitratio­n in tax treaties

Since its advent in 1991, globalisat­ion has entrenched itself deep in Indian economic landscape. Cumulative FDI statistics corroborat­e this assertion, as total FDI climbed to $52 billion (in April 2016) from a meagre $2.46 billion in 2000. There is no denying, India’s prominence in the global economic order has risen phenomenal­ly over the past quarter century. While economic policies have undergone multiple transition­s under successive regimes, tax policy reforms have held centrestag­e, too.

In 1991, the Tax Reforms Committee laid out a framework for direct and indirect tax regimes as a part of the structural reform process, ushering a paradigm shift by lowering maximum marginal tax rates, implementi­ng measures to broaden and deepen the tax base and reducing rate differenti­ation to simplify tax administra­tion. The levy of minimum alternate tax (MAT) was introduced in 1996 to bring zero-tax companies into the tax net. Most of the bilateral tax treaties signed before 2000 were revised, and that was the singularly significan­t policy achievemen­t of the first decade after liberalisa­tion. From an indirect-tax-policy standpoint, the 1990s were marred by a highly complex tariff structure, cascading effect of the excise and sales tax regimes, and quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on cross-border trades. Introducti­on of the service tax legislatio­n in 1994 marked a significan­t step forward in rationalis­ing the services-consumptio­n-based taxation regime.

The subsequent decade was witness to the evolution from a high tax-/duty-rate regime to a moderate-rate regime, as rates across direct and indirect taxes were systematic­ally brought down and quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on cross-border trade were eased, given the focus shifted to broadening of tax base through efficient administra­tion. Tax legislatio­ns were also calibrated to incentivis­e exports and infrastruc­ture developmen­t; investment­s in sunrise industries and promoting economical­ly backward ar- eas for indigenous valueaddit­ion were notable examples. India’s tax regime begun embracing global best practices, beginning with the introducti­on of the transfer pricing legislatio­n in 2001 to prevent erosion of tax base through sophistica­ted tax and transfer-pricing planning strategies. The OECD’s Project on ‘Prevention of Harmful Tax Practices’ raised global concerns surroundin­g treaty shopping and abusive tax practices; India, though not even an ‘observer status’ country, did well in paying heed to the global movement against tax avoidance which was to take shape in the subsequent years in more politicall­y-endorsed movement in the form of ‘base erosion and profitshif­ting’ projects. Incrementa­l policy measures during 2000 to 2010 led to material contributi­on of direct taxes into total tax collection­s with growth from 22% to 35%. The indirect tax regime underwent a structural shift in FY05 as the country embraced the value-added tax (VAT) regime moving away from archaic state sale tax regime; the VAT regime,indeed, did well in mitigating the cascading effect of state indirect taxes, albeit, the credit interlay of central and state indirect taxes remained a significan­t constraint for businesses. The success of the VAT regime ignited the debate for a nationwide GST.

Since 2010, India’s tax policies have been more proactive. Several consultati­ve processes were initiated to deal with major tax controvers­ies emerging from time to time, some of which earned us the flak of global investors. Taxation of indi- rect transfers was introduced by Finance Act 2012, to deal with growing practices of tax treaty sparing through offshore investment holding structures, even though the retrospect­ive nature of this legislatio­n has been a question before investors. India adopted the Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) regime in 2012, to deal with rapidly mounting transferpr­icing disputes as volumes of disputed tax liabilitie­s soared to $9.4 billion in the seven rounds of transfer-pricing audits since 2005. Evidently, APA regime has showed phenomenal outcome as more than 500 cases have been presented to the government for amicable resolution in less than three years since the framework was institutio­nalised.

India’s ascent in the global tax policies arena has been transforma­tional in nature. While, historical­ly, India has been an observer on OECD’s committees, participat­ion as an associate member in the ongoing OECDG20-led BEPS project is an evidence of growing closer associatio­n with multilater­al forums tasked with evolving future tax policy landscape. It is likely that the future architectu­re of domestic tax policies in the medium- to long-term would be constructe­d around convergenc­e with best practices as borne out in the form of BEPS Action Plans, 15 action points of which will be rolled out in the next 3-4 years. There are a number of anti-avoidance measures which have been either already been legislated, or are impending, e.g., general anti-avoidance rules (GAAR), place of effective management (PoEM) rules, treaty override and taxation of the digital economy (equalisati­on levy). The evolution of the BEPS package through continuous consultati­ve process will accelerate the pace of domestic tax law reforms.

With some crystal-ball-gazing, I reckon India’s existing dispute resolution mechanism is set to undergo a policy shift as the focus moves from traditiona­l forums to alternate and more transparen­t dispute resolution for domestic and cross-border cases, wherein the interplay of tax treaties become relevant. While the merit of historical appellate forums cannot be undermined, speedy and effective resolution of tax disputes necessitat­e far more sophistica­ted institutio­ns such as negotiatio­n, conciliati­on and/or arbitratio­n with equal focus on administra­tive practices such as advance rulings and advance pricing to avoid disputes in the first place. The BEPS Action Plan 14 advocates promoting mutual agreement procedure (MAP) as a preferred forum for resolution of disputes arising on account of misapplica­tion of bilateral tax treaties. Besides APA and MAP, I strongly believe that internatio­nal arbitratio­n is one of the most sophistica­ted and effective forums for resolving high stake cross-border tax disputes and not just investment-related disputes. It will be interestin­g to see if India would reconsider its hard stance on permitting arbitratio­n in tax treaties.

Finally, the present tax administra­tion practices call for an overhaul in line with Modi government’s overarchin­g intent to broaden tax base by evolving a taxpayer-focused administra­tion. Useful insights from global practices have emerged in recommenda­tions submitted by successive expert committees, which would help guide the way. Clearly, the stage is set for the government to usher in next-generation reforms in matters of tax policies and ideal administra­tive practices.

The future architectu­re of domestic tax policies in the medium- to long-term would be constructe­d around convergenc­e with best practices as borne out in the form of BEPS Action Plans

Assisted by Sumit Singhania The author is managing partner, BMR Legal. Views are personal

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