HomeNewsBusinessCompaniesMauritius may have got the rough end of the stick

Mauritius may have got the rough end of the stick

The recently amended tax treaty with Mauritius surely has given India a clear advantage over tax evaders, but the island nation's coffers will be under stress, finds a Moody's report.

May 23, 2016 / 14:48 IST
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Moneycontrol BureauTwo weeks ago, India changed its 34-year-old tax treaty with Mauritius. For a long time, the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) had been an irritant for India. The pact was used as a cover by foreign investors to route their investments through the island nation back into India and give the slip to taxmen in both countries. To be sure, the agreement needed tweaks -- and for a reason. Mauritius accounted for a whopping USD 93.66 billion (or 33.7 percent) of the total foreign direct investment of USD 278 billion. With so much money in transit, the amended treaty received a lot of hurrahs from industry.

But thanks to the new treaty, Mauritius' coffers will also be under stress, finds a Moody’s report. Its balance of payments will take a knock, says the note. Net inflows that poured into Mauritius had helped the central bank of that country to tote up foreign-exchange reserves of almost USD 4 billion (as of March 2016). Six years ago, it was USD 2 billion.

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Companies which use the DTAA in Mauritius operate under a special licence. These companies have 0 percent capital gains tax. Their corporate taxes are also low.

By the end of 2014, Mauritian companies with this special licence held USD 200 billion in Indian assets, according to the Financial Sector Commission of Mauritius. They constituted 38 percent of their USD 520 billion total assets held worldwide, including in Mauritius, says the report.