ADVERTISEMENT

2013: No resolution to Vodafone tax dispute; DTC, GST still in limbo

The Rs 11,200 crore-tax dispute with British telecom giant Vodafone continued to linger for yet another year, the period during which the government also toiled without success to bring in major tax reforms, especially, the GST or goods and services tax and DTC or direct tax code.
     
Besides Vodafone, several other major MNCs or multi-national companies like Nokia and Shell too were locked in tax dispute with the revenue department.
     
Vodafone had offered to settle the dispute through conciliation to which the government agreed, but there has been no significant forward movement.
     
Several rounds of meetings have taken place with top executives of Vodafone and officials of Finance Ministry and some developments are expected in the new year.
     
The telecom major is facing a tax liability of over Rs 11,200 crore, along with interest, on its 2007 acquisition of Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa's stake in India's Hutchison Essar.
     
Besides this, Vodafone has also said it will challenge the tax authorities' order in a case related to the sale of the company's call centre business, for which a demand of about Rs 3,700 crore was raised.
     
On the legislation front, despite repeated assurances by Finance Minister P Chidambaram, ambitious tax reforms -DTC and the GST -- are yet to see the light of the day for want of political consensus.
     
Dubbed as "game changers" by Chidambaram, these two important bills, when implemented, would change the entire tax collection system, both direct and indirect. It is believed that these two bills will not only help increase revenue collection, but also improve tax compliance.
     
Faced with widening current account deficit (CAD) and battering of the rupee, the government hiked import duty on gold in tranches to 10 per cent during the year.
     
As far as revenue collection target for the fiscal is concerned, the government is facing an uphill task amid slowing economy. Chidambaram, however, kept up pressure on tax evaders to come clean and take advantage of the service tax amnesty scheme.