HomeNewsTrendsLegalMNCs may have to recalibrate after SC denies double taxation benefits unless notified by law of the land

MNCs may have to recalibrate after SC denies double taxation benefits unless notified by law of the land

The ruling was given while interpreting the MFN clause in the double taxation avoidance treaties with France, Switzerland and the Netherlands.

October 25, 2023 / 11:17 IST
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SC, DTAA, MFN and income tax
SC, DTAA, MFN and income tax

Multinational Companies (MNCs) will have to redo their Return on Investment (ROI) and cost benefit analysis as a result of the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA), experts said. The ruling was given on an appeal filed by the Income Tax Department.

Last week, the Supreme Court ruled that parties cannot avail of benefits under DTAA unless Indian tax authorities explicitly notify it. Simply put, the apex court has held that even if India enters into a DTAA with a nation, one cannot avail of benefits under it, unless it is woven into the country’s laws by a notification. Countries enter into DTAA to avoid taxation on the same income by two countries, if a person or a company earns income in country A from an investment in country B, tax will have to be paid only in one country depending on the terms of DTAA.

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The court ruled this while interpreting the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause in the DTAA treaties between India and the Netherlands, France, and Switzerland. The MFN clause provides for lowering of rate of taxation at source on dividends, interest, royalties or fees for technical services (FTS). As per the MFN clause, when a country gives trade concessions to a member country of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), it must be given to all. However, the SC was called upon to decide on whether the MFN clause is applicable to a third country, which was not an OECD member when India entered the agreement, but became a member at a later date.

The SC has also held that “For a party to claim benefit of a “same treatment” clause, based on entry of DTAA between India and another state which is member of OECD, the relevant date is entering into treaty with India, and not a later date, when, after entering into DTAA with India, such country becomes an OECD member, in terms of India’s practice.”