Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tech giants Google, Facebook seek to defer Indian digital tax

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: Big US tech firms such as Google and Facebook plan to seek deferment of a new Indian digital tax, which has caught them off-guard as businesses battle the fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic, three industry persons familiar with the matter told Reuters.

India announced last week that, from April 1, all foreign billings for digital services provided in the country would attract a 2% tax. Foreign billings are where companies take payment abroad for a service provided to customers in India.

The tax would also apply to e-commerce transactio­ns on websites such as Amazon.com, as well as advertisin­g revenue earned from companies overseas if it eventually “targets a customer” in India, the government said.

Executives from top technology companies got together on conference calls organised by Us-india business lobby groups last week, and decided to seek a deferment of at least six months, said the three people aware of the talks. They asked not to be named as the discussion­s were private.

Google is particular­ly concerned that it will not be able to swiftly identify countries where advertisin­g arrangemen­ts were in place to target Indian users, increasing technologi­cal and compliance requiremen­ts, according to one of the sources.

“Everyone is grappling. In the current downturn, the focus is on protecting the business hit due to coronaviru­s,” said the person who works for a global t e c hnol o g y c o mpany a nd described the tax as a “big, big headache”.

Google and Amazon declined to comment, while Facebook did not respond to Reuters queries. India’s finance ministry also did not respond.

The extent of possible compliance disruption­s caused by the tax, a so-called equalisati­on levy, was not immediatel­y clear, nor was how much India could garner from the tax.

Indruj Rai, a partner at law firm Khaitan & Co, said the gove r nment’s move appeared aimed at taxing foreign companies which had a significan­t local client base but were billing them through their offshore, or foreign, units.

“The timing of the introducti­on of the levy appears to be an attempt to increase revenue collection­s during the pandemic,” Rai added.

The new tax was inserted in the 2020-21 budget amendments passed last week, giving companies only a few days to prepare. The levy was not part of budget proposals first presented on February 1.

India and the United States remain at loggerhead­s over a wide array of tariffs. The digital tax has alarmed the US government, which has reviewed it, but Washington is not immediatel­y likely to raise concerns with New Delhi given priorities over the coronaviru­s, said a fourth person aware of the US government’s thinking.

The U.S. Embassy in New Delhi di d not r e s pond t o a request for comment.

 ??  ?? India announced last week that, from April 1, all foreign billings, where companies charge abroad for a digital service provided in the country, would attract a 2% tax. REUTERS
India announced last week that, from April 1, all foreign billings, where companies charge abroad for a digital service provided in the country, would attract a 2% tax. REUTERS

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