MANY countries in the Western world have in
the recent years come up with offshore voluntary disclosure schemes coupled with
tough regulations and a flurry of activities relating to putting in place
exchange of information agreements. Reports suggest that most of these programs
have met with considerable success with the UK reporting additional revenue of
GBP 82 million, Germany USD 4 billion and Italy USD 4.75 billion. The most
powerful of all tax administrations, the Internal Revenue Service of the USA
has, in fact, come up with two schemes within in a short span of two years, once
in 2009 and once again in 2011. The 2009 Offshore Voluntary disclosure Program
(OVDP) was so successful that as against the expectation of the IRS to have
about a thousand taxpayers availing of the program, there was in fact 15,000 tax
payers who came forward before the program closed on October15, 2009. The
average recovery is reported to be a whopping USD 200,000 per tax payer.
The essential characteristics of such successful schemes is
that the law is made tough and the taxpayers are given sufficient warning that
there will be no escape route available to them and unless they come clean
voluntarily, the Government will go after them.
Recently, OECD has done a survey of offshore voluntary
disclosures schemes of 39 OECD member and non-member countries and found some
common features. Some of these are that the taxpayers must pay the tax that they
would have owed in the absence of the disclosure schemes; they are required to
pay interest on the tax evaded; and in such event, the monetary penalties are
reduced to nil following a full disclosure.
According to the OECD, a successful program should be clear
about its aims and its terms; it should place the short-term boost to revenues
in the context of improving compliance across the taxpayer population as a whole
by complementing it with measures that improve compliance in the medium term.
The most important caveat put out by the OECD and which is relevant in the
Indian context is that a successful programme presupposes that there are
adequate and credible enforcement measures in place to detect and deter evaders,
including those who might otherwise choose not to participate in the programme,
and those who might otherwise be tempted to slip back into non-compliance in the
future. Depending on the applicable legal framework and country
circumstances, this might include exemplary prosecution of those who defraud the
programme.
In India, voluntary disclosure schemes of the past have not
been much of a success. Considering the attributes of a successful scheme as
detailed by the OECD and the practical working of the tax administration and the
judiciary in India, it is unlikely that we will have such features in any near
future. Not to talk of exemplary punishment, nobody in India has ever heard of a
tax offender being sentenced to imprisonment by the courts. That apart, there
seems to be a public revulsion against a disclosure scheme since in popular
perception such schemes discriminate against honest taxpayers. It is also
generally believed that the Government had earlier promised to the Supreme Court
at the time of the last VDIS to the effect that it will no longer come out with
any such scheme. That may be the reason why the government did not go along with
the introduction of an amnesty scheme despite there being so many examples to go
by.
Nevertheless, there is a provision in the Budget 2011, which if
not properly monitored, may yet turn out to be a mini voluntary disclosure
scheme. This is the provision relating to bringing in dividends from foreign
subsidiaries of Indian companies. When money is invested abroad by Indian
companies for opening a subsidiary in a foreign country, there is some
monitoring by the Reserve Bank of India. It is not known if the RBI subsequently
monitors the extent of the profits earned by such subsidiaries. The definition
of a foreign subsidiary as given in the original Finance Bill was that the
Indian parent must holdat least half of the nominal shares of the foreign
company.
There have been representations earlier also from trade and
industry bodies to the effect that while only dividend distribution tax is
levied when Indian subsidiaries distribute dividends, dividends from foreign
subsidiaries, if declared and distributed and brought to India will suffer tax
at the maximum marginal rate, thereby disincetivising such repatriation. Such
requests used to be turned down principally on the ground that it is not
possible to monitor as to whether what is being brought in really represents
dividends, particularly in view of the fact that information from abroad was
difficult to come by.
However, this time the government seems to have a change of
mind and the Finance Bill proposed to tax foreign dividends @ 15% in the hands
of the parent company. That would theoretically put dividends received from
Indian subsidiaries and foreign subsidiaries at par. While the move seems
logical, much will depend on the actual implementation. What is interesting to
note, however, is that this window has been kept open only for one year. The
Government has, therefore, to ensure that this scheme does not degenerate into a
VDIS through backdoor without the safeguards as recommended by the OECD. The
fact that CFC legislation kicks in from April 2012, coupled with the fact that
the Government is entering into TIEAs at break-neck speed, also lends credence
to such a theory.
It is true that the scheme is available only to Indian
companies having subsidiaries abroad. It is however curious that the Government
having introduced the scheme in the Finance Bill, obviously after due
deliberation, has immediately made a change in the definition of ‘subsidiary'
through a Government amendment. An Indian company holding 26% of the share
capital of a foreign company as against 50% as proposed in the original Finance
Bill, will now be deemed to have a foreign subsidiary. The ostensible reason
given is that it will help the JV companies to avail of the facility.
Corporates, however, are still whining about the fact that they
cannot book any expenses since the tax rate on such dividends will be a flat one
and it is specifically provided in the newly introduced Section 115BBD(2) that
no deduction in in respect of any expenditure or allowance shall be allowed in
computing the dividend. That apart, in terms of section 115O (1A), the dividend
distribution tax to be paid by an Indian company is to be reduced by the
dividend distribution tax paid by the subsidiary company. Here, since the
subsidiary will be a foreign company, question of paying dividend distribution
tax will not arise and hence no credit will be available to the holding company
in respect of the taxes paid, if any, by the foreign subsidiary when the Indian
holding company, in its turn, distributes dividends to its shareholders from out
of such dividends repatriated by the foreign subsidiary.
As for the quality of the money coming in, it is true that the
RBI keeps some account of the investment by the Indian companies. But, it does
not seem that the RBI may have any idea of the income earned from such
investments. However, the Companies Act specifies in section 212 that the Indian
companies are required to attach copies of the balance sheet of the subsidiaries
along with the annual financial account. It is, therefore, possible for the tax
authorities to question the provenance of the money.
It is probable that some of the foreign subsidiaries of Indian
companies indeed have accumulated profits. It will be possible for them to
declare dividends from out of the accumulated reserves as also from out of the
current year's profits. The question that arises is whether any planning is
possible with the scheme. If the subsidiary happens to be in a jurisdiction with
which India does not have a tax treaty or a TIEA, and there are plenty of them,
it is quite possible for moneys to be shown as dividends. After all, many Indian
companies had shown more than 100% profitability whenever there have been
exemptions and deductions. Many of the erstwhile 80HHC companies and many of the
10A, 10B companies have brought in money as export proceeds. There is nothing to
presume that they will have a change of heart merely because of Anna Hazare's
movement and will not resort to such shenanigans. And, the tax
department's success in unearthing such scams has been very limited. The only
constraint for the planners seems to be to have a subsidiary company abroad for
which some sort of permission form RBI may be necessary. The next stage of
generation of profit is rather easy in a foreign jurisdiction, particularly if
it is a complicit one. Then the money stashed abroad that we hear about can
easily be brought in as dividends by paying only 15% tax unlike in the case of
VDIS in which at least the full rate of tax is charged along with a small amount
by way of penalty/interest.
It may, however, be noted that Section 212 of the Companies Act
provides that the Indian holding company shall in respect of each of its
subsidiary attach the balance sheet, profit and loss account, report of the
Board of directors and the report of the auditors for the subsidiaries. This is
applicable both for the domestic and overseas subsidiaries. There is a provision
for getting exemption from the requirement of furnishing such details from the
company law authorities in terms of section 212(8). With the process of
liberalization in India, a lot of subsidiaries have been created and it seems
that the company law authorities were receiving a number of applications to
dispense with the requirement of furnishing of all the particulars on a
case-by-case basis. Therefore, through circular No 2 of 2011, of the Ministry of
corporate Affairs, a general exemption has been given subject to the fulfillment
of certain conditions and provided there is consolidation of the accounts in
accordance with the relevant accounting standard. One of the conditions which is
relevant in the context of our discussion is the following condition no (iv) of
the circular which states that: “the company shall disclose in the
consolidated balance sheet the following information in aggregate for each
subsidiary including subsidiaries of subsidiaries: (a) capital (b) reserves (c)
total assets (d) total liabilities (e) details of investment( except in case of
investment in the subsidiaries) (f) turnover (g) profit before taxation (h)
provision for taxation (i) profit after taxation,(j) proposed dividend .”
The moot point is that if the circular is followed, all the
relevant information regarding reserves and proposed dividend should be
available in the holding company's annual accounts. It is another matter that in
many of the consolidated accounts of Indian companies such information is not
actually available.
As for keeping the window of opportunity open for only one
year, we find a parallel in the provisions of the American jobs creation Act
enacted in end, 2004. Passed before the second term of President Bush, the Act
provided for a temporary 85% dividend received on certain foreign earnings
repatriated during a one-year period. This resulted in an effective tax rate of
only 5.25% federal tax on the repatriated earnings. There was however other
conditionalities involved. To qualify, the earnings were to be reinvested in the
USA in terms of a reinvestment plan approved by the Board of directors. There
were certain other conditions as well. It has however been reported that
although American companies repatriated close to 500 million dollars, there were
no surge in job creation, which was the main objective of the scheme. It is also
reported that the provisions amounted to a refund of roughly 100 billion to such
companies. This, therefore, might not have been a good precedent to follow.
For those Indian companies that were perspicacious enough to
have subsidiaries in appropriate jurisdictions, dividends may just be pouring in
this year. For others, tax planners will be readying schemes. In any event,
civil society, which is apparently screaming hoarse about black money, will do
well to keep a tab on at least the quantum of money coming in this year as
dividends from foreign subsidiaries to ensure that the scheme brought in does
not degenerate into another VDIS without appropriate safeguards.
|