25 June 2019

Indian Government ratifies Multilateral Instrument

Executive summary

On 12 June 2019, the Indian Government announced its ratification of the Multilateral Instrument to Implement Tax Treaty Related Measures to Prevent BEPS (the MLI).1 The MLI will modify provisions of existing Indian tax treaties that qualify as a Covered Tax Agreement (CTA).2 The impact of the MLI on India's CTAs are significant and requires careful consideration for existing and proposed transactions and structures. As a next step, India will need to deposit its ratified MLI with the OECD3 with its final positions.

Detailed discussion

Background

The MLI has been signed by 88 countries,4 of which 27 countries5 have already submitted a ratified copy with the OECD. India signed the MLI on 7 June 2017 and at that time, submitted a provisional list of tax agreements that would be modified by the MLI and the provisional positions on the articles of the MLI. On 12 June 2019, the Indian Cabinet announced the MLI ratification.

Impact of ratification

After the ratification, India must perform the following procedures to implement the MLI: (i) submit the ratified copy of the MLI with the OECD; (ii) complete internal procedures for each CTA to make the MLI effective; and (iii) notify the OECD and CTA partner of the completion of its internal procedures. The details on the final positions, however, have not yet been released.

Date of entry into effect for India's CTAs: India has adopted an optional provision under the MLI, under which the date of entry into effect for India's CTAs would be determined 30 days after the OECD receives notification from both India and its tax treaty partner regarding the completion of their respective internal procedures (referred to as the "optional relevant date") as specified in the following manner:

Type of tax

Date of entry into effect of Indian CTAs

For withholding taxes

First day of the next taxable period or calendar year that begins on or after the "optional relevant date"

For other taxes

Taxable period that begins on or after the expiration of six-calendar months from the "optional relevant date"

For example, if India and a treaty partner notify the OECD by 31 August 2019, the MLI would be effective in India for a CTA from 1 April 2020 with respect to both withholding and other taxes.

Implications

The ratification of the MLI is a defining moment in India's international tax policy and is another milestone in the implementation of the treaty-based BEPS recommendations. While India's final positions will be known only once the ratification instrument is filed with the OECD, India's provisional positions provide a direction of the likely changes that include strict anti-avoidance measures, lower permanent establishment thresholds and improved dispute resolution provisions.

The impact of the MLI on existing and proposed transactions and structures would need to be carefully considered, especially in light of the lack of specific grandfathering provisions.

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ENDNOTES

1 Base Erosion and Profit Shifting.

2 Tax treaties that would be modified by the MLI.

3 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

4 As of 18 June 2019.

5 Australia, Austria, Curaçao, Finland, France, Georgia, Guernsey, Ireland, Isle of Man, Israel, Japan, Jersey, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Sweden, United Arab Emirates, and United Kingdom as on 18 June 2019.

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CONTACTS

For additional information with respect to this Alert, please contact the following:

Ernst & Young LLP (India), Mumbai

  • Sudhir Kapadia
    sudhir.kapadia@in.ey.com

Ernst & Young LLP (India), Hyderabad

  • Jayesh Sanghvi
    jayesh.sanghvi@in.ey.com

Ernst & Young LLP (United States), Indian Tax Desk, New York

  • Roshan Samuel
    roshan.samuel1@ey.com
  • Chintan Gala
    chintan.gala@ey.com
  • Arpita Khubani
    arpita.khubani@ey.com

Ernst & Young LLP (United States), Indian Tax Desk, San Jose

  • Archit Shah
    archit.shah@ey.com

Ernst & Young Solutions LLP, Indian Tax Desk, Singapore

  • Gagan Malik
    gagan.malik@sg.ey.com

Ernst & Young LLP (United Kingdom), Indian Tax Desk, London

  • Amit B Jain
    amit.b.jain1@uk.ey.com

Ernst & Young LLP (United States), Asia Pacific Business Group, New York

  • Chris Finnerty
    chris.finnerty1@ey.com
  • Kaz Parsch
    kazuyo.parsch@ey.com
  • Bee Khun Yap
    bee-khun.yap@ey.com

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ATTACHMENT

PDF version of this Tax Alert

Document ID: 2019-1159