Business Standard

Dividend tax: No relief for FPIS

Firms withhold at higher rate despite Budget tweak; NSDL readying platform to address this

- ASHLEY COUTINHO Mumbai, 24 June

Companies continue to withhold tax at the domestic rate of 20 per cent, plus surcharge and cess, in financial year 2021-22 (FY22) despite an amendment introduced in the Budget allowing foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) to avail of lower treaty rates of 5-15 per cent on dividends paid from April 1, said two people familiar with the matter.

Indian companies paying dividends do not have the resources to ascertain whether an FPI is eligible for treaty benefits or if it is the beneficial owner of such income, the sources said. In the past, tax authoritie­s have ruled an entity as not being a beneficial owner of dividend income and have levied interest or penalty on firms for lower deduction of tax.

“Right now, registrar and share transfer agents of companies are not able to bring in the level of consistenc­y that we want. They have different formats, approaches and expectatio­ns from FPIS, and are not consistent in applying a lower or higher rate of tax for the same FPI. The need of the hour is to standardis­e R&T behaviour,” said a custodian familiar with the matter.

To get around this, the National Securities Depository (NSDL) has begun groundwork on creating a common platform at the depository account level where FPIS can upload all relevant details to avail of lower taxes on dividends, and which can be easily accessed by companies.

“We are working with R&T agents, companies, tax consultant­s and custodians to create this platform,” said an NSDL official, but declined to give a specific timeframe for the exercise.

Tax consultant­s and custodians are also working together to standardis­e the documents that FPIS need to furnish. Other than a tax residency certificat­e, FPIS will provide an undertakin­g with respect to beneficial ownership and a declaratio­n of no permanent establishm­ent to the depositori­es.

“When we create a common database, every document of the FPI cannot be available to the whole market. That’s not the intention. There are confidenti­ality issues that need to be tackled and the company needs to be comfortabl­e in deducting the lower rate of tax, which may not be possible in all cases,” said the custodian quoted above.

A total of 916 companies paid dividends of ~2.6 trillion in FY21, shows the data from Capitaline. Of this, the top 20 players contribute­d ~1.49 trillion.

“Companies paying dividend or interest income need to assess the eligibilit­y of the FPI to get the tax treaty benefits. Treaties also have a number of other conditions that the FPI needs to fulfill that includes a liable to tax test and beneficial ownership test. Companies deducting tax at source are unable to verify all the facts and therefore seek an undertakin­g, Form 10F and other documents from the FPI,” said Suresh Swamy, partner, Price Waterhouse & Co LLP.

He added that FPIS should be permitted to obtain a withholdin­g tax certificat­e from the tax office to give more certainty to the payer on the applicable rate. Last year, the Supreme Court had held that the obligation to deduct tax at source is not affected by the provisions of the tax treaty. The payer cannot apply the provisions of the tax treaty and absolve itself from the liability to withhold tax as per the I-T Act. It was upon the taxpayer to file a return, plead the benefit of treaty and claim refund of excess taxes withheld, if any.

The ruling sparked concern among FPIS as taxes were withheld under section 196D without considerin­g the benefit of tax treaties. To address this, the provisions were amended in the Finance Act 2021, allowing income tax to be deducted at 20 per cent or at lower treaty rates provided the FPI furnished a tax residency certificat­e.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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