Business Standard

Redefined in Budget: Who’s an Indian resident

- HARSH ROONGTA The writer is a Sebi-registered Investment Advisor

BASED ON A quick internet search it seems Budget 2020 puts India in very illustriou­s company. We have joined the illustriou­s company of Eritrea (it is a small country in East Africa) and the mighty US of A as the third country that will tax its citizens on income earned outside the country even when the citizens reside outside the country. It has been proposed as a provision to prevent tax abuse. The proposal seeks to redefine the concept of “resident in India” tax provisions for what are referred to as “stateless” persons. The explanator­y memorandum talks of high networth individual­s who abuse these provisions for availing of what the explanator­y memorandum refers to as “double non-taxation”. Oneclassof­peoplewhow­illbesever­elyaffecte­disthe merchantna­vypersonne­l(mostofwhom­aredefinit­elynot highnetwor­thindividu­als).currently,iftheyserv­eonforeign shipsformo­rethansixm­onthsinaye­arandgetth­eirsalarie­s fromtheiro­verseasemp­loyers,theydonotp­aytaxesina­ny countryinc­ludingindi­a.theycomple­telyescape­paymentof taxes,whichisjus­tifiedbeca­usetheyear­ntheirinco­meonthe highseas.butthetaxd­epartmentf­eelsthatmo­stofthemha­ve theirfamil­ies inindiaand­almostallo­ftheirtime,apartfrom onshipduti­es,isspentin India.therestoft­heir economicac­tivitiesar­ealso almostexcl­usivelyini­ndia. The proposed anti-abuse provision provides that if they are not paying taxes in any other country they will anyways be deemed to be Resident in India (even if they are serving on the ship for the entire year and not even setting foot in India for the whole year). They will still have to pay tax in India. That is a rather high price to pay for the Indian passport as they will end up paying tax on income earned outside India and they never even set foot in India for the whole year. Although it does not seem to be the intention, the way the proposal is worded, even Indian citizens staying/working in zero tax countries such as Dubai may have to pay tax in India on incomes earned there even if they never visit India or have no economic connection with India.

No attention to detail seems to have been paid while introducin­g such a major provision and the wide arc of people it will take in its ambit. On the other big thing that we will join the illustriou­s company of the US of A , Australia and Canada, is by having a Citizens charter in our Income tax Act. I just looked up the existing charter put out by the CBDT . Currently, it is just meant as a statement of intentions rather than an enforceabl­e charter. For example, it provides that the income tax department will provide refund within six months of the return being received. An appellate order will be given effect to within one month . A request for rectificat­ion of an assessment order will be given in two months. The issue is that none of this is currently legally enforceabl­e. These are just intentions of the department. Anyone who has dealt with the Income tax department will tell you these time lines are laughable. One assumes that the charter announced under the Income Tax Act will be legally enforceabl­e and will provide penalties where the department transgress­es the timelines mentioned there. Without such penalties the charter, even if issued under the Income Tax Act, will remain a meaningles­s document. With such penalties , it will be a powerful force for change and foster genuine trust in the department. It will also be interestin­g what timelines the department will commit to when the charter is provided under the Income tax Act as compared to the current one. The third big change is the availabili­ty of lower income tax rates to individual­s who agree to give many exemptions/ deductions such as standard deduction , HRA exemption , LTC, interest on home loans related to self occupied property, your insurance premium, ELSS, EPF contributi­on/medical policy premium, interest on education loan etc. and for self employed people many other deductions such as depreciati­on, etc. The lower rates apply till the taxable income is ~15 lakh per annum. The provisions are extremely convoluted. The end result is that you may pay almost the same amount of tax but you will be left with better liquidity as you will not need to invest your monies in the specified modes. The good thing is that salaried individual­s who don’t have income from business, can exercise this option each year. At first glance it seems very few salaried people will be opting for this though some business consultant­s with low expenses may opt for it. It is basically a boon for tax consultant­s who will be besieged with queries on whether to opt for this scheme or not.

For merchant navy profession­als, this is a rather high price to pay for the Indian passport as they will now end up paying tax on income earned outside India and they never even set foot in the country for the whole year

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