CBDT suggests “Equalisation Levy” of 6-8% on B2B deals

March 22, 2016
by
1 min read

A CBDT committee on taxation of e-commerce has suggested a "Equalisation Levy" of 6-8% for business-to-business deals with a view to tax digital transactions.

Based on the recommendations of the committee, which had submitted its report to the government in February, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in his Budget proposed an Equalisation Levy of 6% to tap tax on income accruing to foreign e-commerce companies from India.

The report, which was made public today, has suggested introduction of the tax based on the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) report which was earlier endorsed by G20 and OECD.

The committee set up by Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has suggested that Equalisation Levy between 6-8% be imposed on amount paid to non-resident by an Indian resident for specified digital services. It also suggested that this Levy should not be a part of the Income-Tax Act.

The specified services would include online advertising or any services, rights or use of software for online advertising, including advertising on radio & television, designing, hosting or maintenance of websites, digital space for website, e-mails, blogs, facility for online sale of goods or services or collecting online payments.

It would also include use or right to use or download online music, online movies, online games and online software applications accessed or downloaded through internet or telecommunication networks.

Jaitley in the Budget had said that in order to tap tax on income accruing to foreign e-commerce companies from India, a person making payment to a non-resident, who does not have a permanent establishment, exceeding in aggregate Rs 1 lakh in a year, for online advertisement, will withhold tax at 6% of gross amount paid, as Equalisation levy. The levy will only apply to B2B transactions.

EY Tax Partner (Media & Entertainment) Rakesh Jariwala said "it is imperative that the government not only lays down clear guidelines around the transaction covered under the levy but equally, the manner of determination as to whether EQL or income tax will apply on a transaction. Else the transaction could lead to double taxation EQL as well as income tax".

Nangia & Co Managing Partner Rakesh Nangia said since the levy is not a tax on income, tax treaty shall not be applicable and hence tax credit cannot be claimed by the foreign recipient. "This view is reaffirmed from the fact that the committee ruled out the option of levying withholding tax considering it would not be feasible to amen the tax treaties in this regard," Nangia said.

[Source: www.dnaindia.com]

Previous Story

Taxman gets new tech tool to identify, kill duplicate PAN

Next Story

SC to lift entry tax cap, Rs 10k cr bonanza for states

Latest from Blog

Income Tax deduction for procurements from MSMEs only upon actual payment

By Shaleen Shah | LinkedIn, assisted by Divyansh Jain Introduction This Note is relevant to computation of income under the head ‘Income from business and profession’. Section 43B of the Income Tax Act provides a list of expenses allowed as deduction, on cash basis irrespective of the year of accounting.

Foreign companies may be required to file Tax Returns in India

by Nexdigm Private Limited as published on mondaq.com Impact of increase in withholding tax on rates for Fees for Technical Services and Royalty As per Indian Tax laws1, payments made to Non-Residents/Foreign Companies for Fees for Technical Services (FTS) and Royalties were liable to tax at the effective tax rate of

How Cryptocurrencies Are Taxed In India

[Source: forbes.com; Authors: Justin M Bharucha, Aashika Jain] Cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are presently unregulated in India. While the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had sought to ban cryptocurrencies in 2018, the Supreme Court quashed the attempted ban leaving cryptocurrencies in regulatory limbo – neither illegal nor, strictly speaking,

Higher rate of TDS in certain situations from 1st July 2021

[By Shaleen Shah (Partner), VNCA] Finance Act 2021, has introduced a new section 206AB effective from 1-Jul-2021 wherein a payer/buyer is responsible to deduct TDS at higher rate (i.e. twice the rate as specified under the relevant provision of the Income Tax Act or twice the rate/ rates in force;
GoUp

Don't Miss

How Cryptocurrencies Are Taxed In India

[Source: forbes.com; Authors: Justin M Bharucha, Aashika Jain] Cryptocurrencies and

Only 329 startups can claim tax holiday under Startup India

[Source: cnbctv18.com] Exactly five years since the launch of the