Millennium Post

Sovereign funds to get tax break for investing in wider infra sector

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NEW DELHI: The income tax (I-T) department has notified tax exemption on interest, dividend and capital gain incomes of sovereign wealth funds (SWFS) and global pension funds arising from their investment in Indian infrastruc­ture. The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) through a notificati­on dated July 6 has widened the scope of 'infrastruc­ture' for the purpose of claiming income tax exemption under Section 10 (23FE) of the I-T Act introduced via the Finance Act 2020. The said Section permits a complete tax exemption to certain exclusive category of non-resident investors on their income streams such as dividends, interest and capital gains.

Nangia Andersen LLP Partner Aravind Srivatsan said the Section was aimed at targeting select group of investors such as the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority through their wholly-owned subsidiary, SWFS and pension funds so that they increase their commitment or allocation­s to India. "Pursuant to the notificati­on, investment­s made by these investors fund directly or through vehicles such as AIF (alternativ­e investment fund) into as many as 34 defined infrastruc­ture sectors will qualify," Srivatsan said.

This notificati­on shall come into force from April 1, 2021, and shall be applicable for the assessment year (AY) 2021-22 and subsequent AYS, the CBDT said.

AKM Global Tax Partner Amit Maheshwari said considerin­g India's need for huge investment in infrastruc­ture, this is a good move. "This will attract sovereign funds to a more diverse range of infrastruc­ture companies into sectors like telecom, energy, logistics, hospitals, and cold chains."

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had in Budget 2020 announced tax exemption for such infrastruc­ture investment­s in India.

"In order to incentivis­e the investment made by the sovereign wealth fund of foreign government­s in the priority sectors, I propose to grant 100 per cent tax exemption to their interest, dividend and capital gains incomes in respect of investment made in infrastruc­ture and other notified sectors before March 31, 2024, and with a minimum lock-in period of 3 years," she had said. The CBDT notificati­on aligns the definition of the term "infrastruc­ture facility" with the harmonised master list issued by the Department of Economic Affairs in 2018. "Pursuant to this notificati­on, investing in India infrastruc­ture would turn attractive, unmindful of hasty downgrade of the country's ratings and allow long-term stable capital to chase high-quality infrastruc­ture projects," Srivatsan added.

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