Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Nokia says India ‘least favourite market’

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Finnish telecom giant Nokia has told India’s government that the country is now its “least favourable market” to operate in and it makes better sense to export its products from China, a report said yesterday.

Nokia, which is fighting a Rs.2000 crore (US $ 311 million) tax demand from Indian authoritie­s, urged the government to “act quickly to correct the wrong perception of India as a place for business”, a newspaper reported.

“The political risk of operating in India” has become “suddenly substantia­lly higher and may inevitably influence future decisions to develop one’s operations in India,” Nokia said in a letter quoted by the daily.

The reported warning comes at a bad time for India when foreign direct investment has slowed to a trickle amid mounting domestic economic woes including a plunging rupee, a huge current account deficit, slowing growth and perceived government policy paralysis.

The Finnish group did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the message which the report said was dated June 19 and was received by the finance ministry last month.

Nokia said its tax problems made it “more cost-efficient for Nokia to transfer the manufactur­e of mobile phones to China and to import them to the Indian market rather than manufactur­e them in Chennai”.

Nokia, which has one of its biggest plants world-wide in Chennai, is among a string of multinatio­nals in tax disputes in India including Cadbury Royal Dutch Shell and Vodafone.

Government has stepped up its pursuit of alleged tax delinquent­s to reduce a hefty budget deficit.Nokia insists software downloaded onto its mobiles in India should to be taxed in Finland under a bilateral treaty between the countries, but India’s tax authoritie­s view it differentl­y.

“Nokia does not think India can override its internatio­nal obligation­s,” Nokia was quoted as saying.

Tax claims against Nokia and other multinatio­nals have “too great an impact on the predictabi­lity and certainty of Indian business environmen­t to be ignored,” Nokia added.

India -- one of the world’s fastest-growing mobile phone markets -- is the second largest market for Nokia which began operations in the country in 1995 and employs 8,000 workers directly in Chennai.

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