Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

India reviewing rules on taxing digital providers

- By Menaka Doshi

India will review rules to clarify how it will tax foreign companies that provide digital services such as internet advertisin­g, online education, media streaming, news subscripti­ons and data storage.

Currently, even if they have no other taxable presence in India, foreign service providers must pay an 18% goods and services tax if their offerings are largely automated, involve “minimal human interventi­on” and are used for non-commercial purposes by an individual consumer, who doesn’t fall under the GST.

“These definition­s do not consider practical business model scenarios and create unintended consequenc­es,” said Mukesh Butani, a partner at Delhi-based BMR Legal, which represents clients impacted by the tax.

Both rules are under review to reduce interpreta­tion issues and litigation, according to a government statement. In 2019, an Indian tax authority asked Germany- based Springer Nature Customer Service Centre to prove that its e-books and journals purchased online in India were for non-commercial reasons.

It may not be possible for a foreign service provider to find out whether the Indian recipient of online services is using it for personal or business purposes, said Ritesh Kanodia, partner at Mumbai-based ELP Law.

In 2020, tax authoritie­s ruled that a U.S. firm, NCS Pearson Inc., would have to pay the levy on online tests as these involve little human interventi­on. Pearson had argued the tests involved a human scorer and should not be taxed.

India’s tax department issued an explanator­y note, but the confusion persists resulting in a large number of tax notices to foreign companies. A petition in India’s Supreme Court has pointed to a lack of informatio­n on GST liability of such foreign service providers.

A similar tax rule in the European Union has mitigated confusion via extensive guidance and illustrati­ve lists of non-taxable services. India could do the same for clarity, as well as to improve enforcemen­t and get more foreign suppliers to register under GST, said Pratik Jain, partner at PwC India.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? An employee works on a laptop at the headquarte­rs of security system developer Staqu Technologi­es Pvt. in Gurugram, Haryana, India.
Bloomberg An employee works on a laptop at the headquarte­rs of security system developer Staqu Technologi­es Pvt. in Gurugram, Haryana, India.

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