Hindustan Times (East UP)

India’s retrospect­ive taxation blunder is still extracting heavy costs

- Prabhash Ranjan is a senior assistant professor, South Asian University and author of India and Bilateral Investment Treaties: Refusal, Acceptance, Backlash The views expressed are personal

Aretroacti­ve law is truly a monstrosit­y. Law has to do with the governance of human conduct by rules. To speak of governing...today by rules that will be enacted tomorrow is to talk in blank prose”. This quote by Lon L Fuller, an American legal philosophe­r, aptly summarises India’s retroactiv­e tax misadventu­re.

In 2012, India amended the Income Tax Act retroactiv­ely to overturn the Supreme Court’s decision favouring Vodafone in a tax battle with the government. The 2012 amendment spooked foreign investors. It amended Section 9(1)(i) of the Income Tax Act, retroactiv­ely making it applicable to “indirect transfers”, ie. to the transfer by a non-resident of a share in a company incorporat­ed abroad, if the share derived, directly or indirectly, its value substantia­lly from assets located in India. One such “indirect transfer” was the 2006 internal corporate restructur­ing carried out by

Cairn Energy. Armed with the 2012 amendment, the Indian government in 2015 imposed on Cairn a draft tax assessment of ₹10,247 crores for the corporate restructur­ing that took place in 2006.

Consequent­ly, Cairn sued India before an investor-State dispute settlement (ISDS) tribunal alleging that imposition of taxes retroactiv­ely violates the India-United Kingdom bilateral investment treaty (BIT). The ISDS tribunal, in late December, ruled in favour of Cairn, holding India guilty of violating the fair and equitable treatment (FET) obligation of the India-UK BIT. The tribunal dismissed India’s argument that the 2012 amendment clarified the intent of Parliament regarding “indirect transfers” and that it was not retroactiv­e.

The tribunal held that the 2012 amendment substantiv­ely changed the scope or operation of Section 9(1)(i) of the Income Tax Act. The tribunal also ruled that whether the 2012 amendment was constituti­onal or not has no bearing on India violating its treaty obligation­s because India’s liability has to be ascertaine­d under internatio­nal law. This is important because it ruptures the myth perpetuate­d by the defenders of the retroactiv­e amendment that a law passed by Parliament that has not been declared unconstitu­tional does not violate India’s BIT obligation­s. The sovereign right to tax should be exercised in a manner consistent with internatio­nal law.

The tribunal reasoned that India’s decision to retroactiv­ely apply the law, without a specific justificat­ion, created a new tax burden on a transactio­n that was not taxable at the time it was carried out, ie. in 2006. India robbed Cairn of its ability to plan its activities keeping in mind the legal consequenc­es of its conduct. It disproport­ionately undermined the principle of legal certainty, which is one of the core elements of the FET standard specifical­ly and of the rule of law generally. Hence, the tribunal ordered India to return over $1.2 billion to Cairn Energy Plc. This is the second instance of an ISDS tribunal admonishin­g India’s 2012 retroactiv­e amendment of the Income Tax Act. A few months ago, another ISDS tribunal in Vodafone Internatio­nal Holdings v India found India guilty of breaching the India-Netherland­s BIT for imposing taxes on Vodafone retroactiv­ely.

The 2012 amendment was a momentous error committed by the United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government. The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government, on assuming office in 2014, had a great opportunit­y to correct this blunder by amending the law and making it prospectiv­e in applicatio­n. This was expected because the Bharatiya Janata Party’s manifesto, cited by the Cairn tribunal, correctly criticised the UPA government for unleashing tax terrorism and uncertaint­y that deleteriou­sly impacted the investment climate. However, the NDA government, instead of amending the law, relentless­ly pursued the tax claims against Vodafone and Cairn Energy.

India has already challenged the Vodafone award. Presumably, it will do the same with the Cairn Energy award. In endeavouri­ng to extract revenue through retroactiv­e taxation that damages investor sentiment in the long run, India is being penny-wise and poundfooli­sh. The government should remember that promoting rule of law and safeguardi­ng legal certainty are important drivers of foreign investment inflows.

 ?? Prabhash Ranjan ??
Prabhash Ranjan

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