Business Standard

Focus on ease of compliance, taxpayers’ rights

- MUKESH BUTA N I

For various reasons, the year 2017 will stand out as having witnessed disruptive tax reforms — the GST roll-out, coupled with a plethora of measures to crack the whip on the parallel economy, tightening the grip on political funding, and enhancing the investigat­ive powers of the tax administra­tion, to name a few. These measures have been a combinatio­n of legislativ­e and administra­tive steps. Penning my thoughts at the same time last year ( Making sense of change, dated December 31, 2016) I reckon, in 2018, the tax reforms agenda could witness an overdrive. I had maintained an optimistic­ally reformist tone on the GST roll-out, India fulfilling its commitment towards the G20-led Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) by being a signatory to Multilater­al Instrument­s (‘MLI’), and many firsts in Budget 2017. Most have actualised, though not without teething glitches.

The year 2018 is expected to take forward the tax reforms agenda, an important indicator in measuring the index of doing business. The impact of reforms was visible in the 2018 World Bank (‘WB’) ranking (which catapulted India to 100th position from 130); ease of paying taxes, besides enforceabi­lity of contracts, resolving insolvency, and dealing with constructi­on permits featured high in the rankings. On ease of tax payments, the WB ranking attributes digital payment of tax, standardis­ing methods, and introducin­g accounting standards for tax computatio­n as additional factors, though the government suffered a setback on the latter due to the Delhi High Court declaring most tax standards as unconstitu­tional.

Income Tax Code

Whether a new income tax code is an answer to reforms is anybody’s guess. Neverthele­ss, an exercise is underway and the earliest the government can introduce a Bill will be in the Winter Session of 2018, though I would imagine a wider stakeholde­r consultati­on could be compromise­d, besides factoring in time for a Parliament­ary Select Committee reviewing an important piece of legislatio­n of this nature. Realistica­lly, we could see a new Income Tax Code in 2020. India would do well to focus upon reducing the cost of compliance burden and address the menace of piling tax disputes as priority. This necessitat­es more of administra­tive measures than legislativ­e, which has been the focus of the administra­tion, albeit in the first two years of the regime. Smoothenin­g GST

An important area of focus is smoothenin­g the rough edges of the GST, a task in which the GST Council has been most active. Given the nature of the dual GST levy, speeding up the inclusion of petroleum goods is a step in the right direction and bringing states on board would accrue GST benefits. The same would hold true for electricit­y taxes as there is little rationale to leave them out of the GST net. These measures are bound to make industry competitiv­e, given the cascading impact, loss of credit, and share of petroleum and electricit­y tax in the indirect tax basket of India. The eway bill will become a reality in early 2018 with the government’s decision to advance its implementa­tion and the anti-profiteeri­ng law will play out as the GST Council initiates action against offenders.

Electoral bonds announced after the passage of the 2017 Finance Bill are likely to be rolled out with an eye on state elections towards the end of 2018. India’s position as signatory to the MLI will be evident in bilateral negotiatio­ns of tax treaties with important trade and investment partners and revisions of its provisiona­l positions (with OECD), given that India has gone ‘all out’ to signal ‘No’ for all forms of treaty planning in its signing ceremony in Paris in June. India may witness an incrementa­l dosage of administra­tive steps to combat the “black economy” in specified sectors, which are convention­ally prone to tax evasion.

An overhaul of US tax reforms, particular­ly on the territoria­l tax and excise tax levy on imports, could prompt India to look again at changes in its domestic law. Though the calibrated reduction of corporate tax rates to 25 per cent remains an unfulfille­d promise, it is difficult to predict if the fiscal deficit situation in 2018, which is expected to increase the country’s oil import bill, will leave sufficient room to cut tax rates. The drastic reduction in the US corporate tax rate to 21 per cent will force emerging economies to react as US MNCs will have a competitiv­e advantage to repatriate income. The impact of the changes would be most in jurisdicti­ons where US MNCs usually park profits or retain earnings for incrementa­l investment­s.

Anticipate changes in domestic law to address issues specific to digital economy and blockchain technology business models. Critical issues that may necessitat­e an interventi­on of regulators and possibly tax laws include income from cryptocurr­encies.

A plethora of tax reforms in India will require balancing the fiscal deficit and administra­tive reforms to address the country’s competitiv­eness as not just an attractive market but also ease of tax compliance. I see taxpayer rights coming to the fore with sensationa­l Panama and Paradise leaks. Who knows what’s next, but 2018 promises to be an eventful year for the tax fraternity.

2018 is expected to take forward the tax reforms agenda, an important indicator for measuring index of doing business

The author is Partner, BMR Legal, and the views expressed are personal. tweets@mukeshbuta­ni

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