Black money case fallout: India pulls out of multilateral information sharing agreement
New Delhi: A day after the Centre submitted its list of 627 Indians who have accounts in HSBC bank, Geneva for tax probe for suspected black money to Supreme Court, India has pulled out of multilateral information sharing agreement.
The Mutilateral Competent Authority Agreement was signed by 51 countries in Berlin on Wednesday. The agreement was designed to enable automatic information to combat black money and also provides for collecting, exchanging information between participating countries on taxpayers’ overseas assets.
Government sources said that India was unable to sign the pact as there was uncertainty about disclosures and lack of clarity on the ability to comply with the confidentiality clause.
Former Solicitor General Harish Salve said any violation of the confidentiality norm in treaties will mean further damage for India. Speaking to Network18, he said, “As of now, this order does not by itself infringe any bilateral investment treaty obligation. The complication is that, there is still a possibility that the SIT may ask the government to make the names public. That should be seriously worrying the government.”
Sources added that India’s stance was likely to impact the ongoing negotiations over info sharing pact with Switzerland and the tax compliance agreement with the US that has to be signed before December 31. If India fails to sign Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act Alert (FATCA), then it would authorise US to charge withholding tax on remittances, Indian bank operations in US.
Sources said that the government will approach Special Investigation Team with respect to its stance on information sharing pacts and hopes that SIT will appreciate the government’s position.