Saturday, March 6, 2010

Companies having permanent establishment in India will be taxed on their technical services fees at marginal tax rate

  

Mar 6, 2010 The finance ministry is hoping to recover about Rs 10,000 crore 
from non-resident service providers to oil and gas explorers in India. 

Finance Minister has  inserted a clarification in the Finance Bill 2010-11
that will stop these companies and other service providers
who had so far used a simpler tax regime to claim a lower tax rate.

The new clause in the Bill states that those companies that
have set up a permanent establishment in India will now be
taxed on their fees for technical services at the marginal rate
of tax applicable to foreign companies.  The rate at present is 42%.

Life for companies that have not set up any such establishment
will continue unchanged. They will be taxed at the presumptive
rate of taxation at the rate of 10% of their total earning from these services.

According to Rajiv Garg, executive director, and tax 
expert on oil and gas sector at PwC, the change was
dynamic and in the offing.

The government has found that the provision was widely abused
by overseas service providers who claimed this benign tax regime
benefits (under Section 44BB of the Income Tax Act) for even
royalty payment and technical services that do not require huge
capital expenditure. Once a design is sold to an Indian client, the
non-resident service provider may have to send some experts here
to help in its implementation, which any way cannot cost as much
as providing plant, machinery or vessels.

Those non-resident entities, that have a permanent establishment
or a fixed place of business in India, are now to be taxed on the
basis of their books of accounts (Section 44DA).

For entities that do not have a permanent establishment in India, 
Section 115A specifies the rate of taxation depending on when
the technology partnership was signed.

Royalty or technical service fee from deals
signed before May 31, 1997 is taxed
at 30%, while it is 20% for deals signed subsequently up to
June 1, 2005. Income from newer deals are taxed at 10%

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