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Google Tax: The search for equality in Equalisation Levy

Indian residents are subject to income tax in India on their worldwide income, whereas non-residents are taxed only on income sourced in India. Certain types of income are deemed to accrue or arise in India under prescribed circumstances.

March 23, 2016 / 13:17 IST
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Preeti Balwani

While cricket aficionados enjoy the T20 World Cup, the E-commerce Committee set up by the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) set up the ground work for the googly delivered by the Finance Minister in his Budget speech. The 124 page report (E-commerce Committee Report) is a departure from the earlier High Powered Committee Report (HPC Report) of the CBDT in September 2001 that maintained that the existing tax regime is adequate to tax digital transactions. While the earlier HPC Report considered “neutrality” as a guiding principle for its conclusion based on policies framed by the Fiscal Affairs Committee of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the present report took cognizance of the Report on Action 1 of Base Erosion & Profit Shifting (BEPS). The BEPS Report clearly highlights the need for modifying existing international taxation rules, and identifies three options, i.e. a new nexus based on significant economic presence, a withholding tax on digital transactions, and Equalization Levy.

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Soon after the Budget proposals were announced on the Equalisation Levy (EQL), India had its own version of the Google Tax following UK and Australia.

Indian residents are subject to income tax in India on their worldwide income, whereas non-residents are taxed only on income sourced in India. Certain types of income are deemed to accrue or arise in India under prescribed circumstances. However, if a non-resident taxpayer is a tax resident of a country with which India has signed a tax treaty, he is entitled to relief under the tax treaty.