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GS Paper 2:
Topics Covered: Government policies.
Context:
Justifying the 2 per cent equalisation levy (EL) imposed by India on the supply of services by multinational enterprises, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said it is a sovereign right to tax revenues earned from operations in the country.
About the Equalisation Levy:
India was the one of the first countries to introduce a 6 per cent equalisation levy in 2016, but the levy was restricted to online advertisement services.
However, India introduced the digital tax in April 2020 for foreign companies selling goods and services online to customers in India and showing annual revenues more than INR 20 million.
Applicability:
India has expanded the scope of the equalisation levy over the last few years, to tax non-resident digital entities.
- While the levy applied only to digital advertising services till 2019-20 at the rate of 6 percent, the government in April 2020 widened the scope to impose a 2 per cent tax on non-resident e-commerce players with a turnover of Rs 2 crore.
- The scope was further widened in the Finance Act 2021-22 to cover e-commerce supply or service when any activity takes place online.
- Since May 2021, this also includes any entity that systematically and continuously does business with more than 3 lakh users in India.
When will the tax not apply?
Offshore e-commerce firms that sell through an Indian arm will not have to pay.
- This means if the goods and services sold on a foreign e-commerce platform are owned or provided by an Indian resident or Indian permanent establishment, they will not be subject to the two percent equalization levy.
Why was it imposed?
The equalisation levy was imposed “to give level playing field between Indian businesses who pay tax in India and foreign e-commerce companies who do business in India but do not pay any income tax here.
Which other countries impose such a levy on digital sellers?
- France imposes a three percent digital services tax.
- In the ASEAN region, Singapore, Indonesia, and Malaysia impose a digital service tax with Thailand announcing forthcoming plans to tax its foreign digital service providers.
Why the United States Trade Representative (USTR) says that this tax is discriminatory?
- First, it states that the DST discriminates against US digital businesses because it specifically excludes from its ambit domestic (Indian) digital businesses.
- USTR also says the DST is discriminatory because it does not extend to identical services provided by non-digital service providers.
Why India says Digital services tax is not discriminatory? And why is it needed?
- Business models employed by non-resident digital service providers obviate the need for a physical presence in India and profits earned here could easily escape the Indian income tax net. Hence, this kind of taxation is necessary.
- Changing International Economic Order: Countries such as India which provide large markets for digital corporations seek a greater right to tax incomes.
Associated Concerns:
- Eventually the tax may become a burden for Digital Consumers.
- It could invite retaliatory tariffs (such as the latest one), as similar tariffs were imposed by the US on France.
- It would also result in double taxation.
Did you know?
In October 2021, G20 countries approved a global deal to adopt a 15 per cent minimum corporate tax and reallocate taxing rights for large profitable multinational enterprises (MNEs) to countries where they sell products and services.
Insta Curious:
- Think! For clarity on concepts:
In B2B transactions where the Service Provider is outside India and the Service Receiver is inside India, who is the liable entity for tax? Read Here.
- Have you heard of the Trade Watch Report by the World Bank? Read Here.
InstaLinks:
Prelims Link:
- About the equalization levy.
- Applicability.
- Exceptions.
- Other countries with similar taxes.
- About OECD.
Mains Link:
Discuss the issues associated with the implementation of equalization levy.
Sources: the Hindu.
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