Economy

India exempts pre-2017 foreign investment gains from tougher tax rules

India will not apply stricter anti-tax avoidance rules to gains from foreign investments made before April 2017, the country’s income tax department said on Wednesday, in a move designed to ease fears of retrospective action among overseas investors.

The clarification follows a Supreme Court ruling in December that found US-based investment firm Tiger Global liable for tax on its sale of a 38% stake in Indian e-commerce company CarTrade Technologies for $1.6 billion in 2018.

The decision unsettled overseas funds and raised questions about whether Indian authorities might revisit older transactions, particularly those structured through Mauritius.

What the tax office said?

“All investments made prior to 1st April 2017 will not be affected by the changes in rules, regulations or interpretations,” the income tax department said in a statement, adding that the clarification was intended to address concerns about transactions conducted in accordance with the laws and Reserve Bank of India guidelines prevailing at the time.

“It is hoped that the clarification provided will contribute towards building confidence and trust of foreign investors in India’s tax regime and uphold its reputation as a transparent, business-friendly destination,” the department added.

Why it matters for overseas investors?

The statement offers a degree of certainty that foreign funds have long sought, particularly those that routed investments through Mauritius under a bilateral tax treaty that India amended in 2016, with changes taking effect from April 2017.

Riaz Thingna, a partner at Grant Thornton Bharat, said the move clarifies that investments made before 1 April 2017 are protected from subsequent changes in tax regulations.

He added that it should help alleviate concerns about retroactive application of tax amendments and reinforces India’s positioning as a transparent and competitive environment for overseas capital.

Legal backdrop and recent disputes

The Supreme Court ruled in December that Tiger Global was liable to pay tax on its CarTrade Technologies sale after finding that the fund had used its Mauritius entities as conduits to invest in India.

The court held that no benefit under the India-Mauritius double tax avoidance treaty could be claimed for pre-2017 investments made in that manner.

Tax uncertainty has long weighed on foreign investor sentiment in India, particularly around the application of the Mauritius treaty.

The country’s record on retrospective taxation has drawn international scrutiny: Britain’s Vodafone won a $2 billion retrospective tax case in 2020 after a 12-year legal battle that included international arbitration in The Hague. German carmaker Volkswagen is currently contesting a demand for $1.4 billion in back taxes related to car imports into India.

Wednesday’s clarification stops short of resolving those broader disputes but signals that authorities are seeking to draw a clearer line under past transactions and rebuild confidence among the overseas investors India is courting as it competes for global capital.

The post India exempts pre-2017 foreign investment gains from tougher tax rules appeared first on Invezz

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