Dividend Income from India: Tax Treaty Issues for Nonresident Shareholders
/Volume 9 No 3 / Read Article
By Sakate Khaitan and Abbas Jaorawala (Guest Authors)
Effective April 1, 2020, the dividend distribution tax (“D.D.T.”) imposed on Indian companies paying dividends was abolished. While Indian politicians may say otherwise, tax advisers outside India viewed the D.D.T. as a workaround allowing India to collect the equivalent of dividend withholding tax without having to take into account a lower rate provided by an income tax treaty. With the demise of the D.D.T., the Indian tax authorities are challenging claims for dividend withholding tax benefits. Sakate Khaitan, the senior partner of Khaitan Legal Associates, Mumbai, and Abbas Jaorawala, a Senior Director and Head-Direct Tax of Khaitan Legal Associates, Mumbai, review issues that have been raised by the Indian tax authorities at the time dividends are declared and paid to residents of several countries that are treaty partners of India. Terms such as G.A.A.R., P.P.T., and M.L.I. are often raised. In addition, treaties that have most-favored-nation (“M.F.N.”) provisions are now regularly challenged. See more →