India notifies pact with US to check tax evasion by MNCs
As per the agreement, it is intended to provide relevant and reliable information to perform an efficient and robust transfer pricing risk assessment analysis.
Aimed at providing relief to subsidiaries of US multinationals and ensuring a check on cross-border tax evasion, India has notified the inter-governmental agreement with the United States for exchange of country-by-country (CbC) reports filed by multinational enterprises (MNEs) regarding income allocation and payment of taxes. This follows the two nations signing a pact in March for sharing the CbC reports by the ultimate parent corporations based in either of the countries.
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As per the agreement, it is intended to provide relevant and reliable information to perform an efficient and robust transfer pricing risk assessment analysis.
The agreement was signed by Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) Chairman P C Mody and US Ambassador to India Kenneth Juster in March, and was notified by the Revenue Department on April 25. This agreement for exchange of CbC reports, along with the Bilateral Competent Authority Arrangement, will enable both the countries to automatically exchange CbC reports filed by the ultimate parent entities of MNEs in the respective jurisdictions, pertaining to the years commencing on or after January 1, 2016.
It will also obviate the need for Indian subsidiary companies of US multinationals to do local filing of CbC reports, thereby reducing the compliance burden.
A CbC report aggregates country-by-country information relating to the global allocation of income, taxes paid, and certain other indicators of an MNC.
It also contains a list of all the group companies operating in a particular jurisdiction and the nature of the main business activity of each such constituent entity. Tax experts said the CBDT had signed the Bilateral Competent Authority Arrangement, along with an underlying Inter-Governmental Agreement, for exchange of CbC reports between India and the US in March. However, since the notification was required for its activation, the procedural delay meant that Indian entities were required to do local filing of CbC reports in India, for which the last date was April 30.
Nitin Narang, partner- Transfer Pricing, Nangia Advisors (Andersen Global), said now, after notification, it would enable both the countries to exchange CbC reports filed by the ultimate parent entities.
“… it would enable both the countries to exchange CbC reports filed by the ultimate parent entities of international groups in USA, pertaining to the financial years commencing on or after January 1, 2016. As a result, the Indian entities would not be required to do local filing of the CbC Reports in India,” he added.
India has already signed the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement (MCAA) for Exchange of CbC reports, which has enabled exchange of CbC reports with 62 jurisdictions. MNEs having global consolidated revenue of 750 million euro or more (or a local currency equivalent) in a year are required to file CbC reports in their parent entity’s jurisdiction. The rupee equivalent of 750 million euro has been prescribed as Rs 5,500 crore in Indian rules.