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ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT EQUALIZATION LEVY 2.0

By
Team Bilimoria
March 14, 2022

I. Introduction:

With the intention of taxing the digital transactions arising from increasing globalization-digitalization and industrial revolution, Equalization Levy was introduced in India in 2016 by Finance Act 2016. India is the first country to charge such a levy.

Chapter VIII of the Finance Act, 2016 provides for Equalization levy (EL 1.0) as a direct tax at the rate of 6% of the consideration payable or paid for any specified service in excess of Rs. 1,00,000/- in a financial year to a person, being a non-resident and paid by a person resident in India or a non-resident having Permanent Establishment (PE) in India. For further details on EL 1.0 one can refer to our article ‘Equalization Levy’ at https://masd.co.in/income-tax/equalization-levy/ )

II. Expansion of Scope by Finance Act (2020):

The scope of the Equalization levy was expanded by the Government of India in the Finance Act, 2020 in order to include the supply of goods and/or services given by an e-commerce operator. The Equalization levy is levied at the rate of 2% on any amount received or receivable by an E-commerce operator from an e-commerce supply of service made or provided

a. to a person resident in India; or

b. to a non-resident in the specified circumstances (as discussed below); or

c. to a person who buys such goods or services or both using an internet protocol address located in India.

Here “Specified circumstances” means

  1. Sale of advertisement which targets a customer, who is a resident in India or a customer who accesses the advertisement through an IP address located in India; and
  2. Sale of data, collected from Indian resident or from a person who uses an IP address located in India

III. E-commerce Supply of Services means:

  1. Online sale of goods owned by e-commerce operator; or
  2. Online provision of services provided by the e-commerce operator; or
  3. Online sale of goods or provision of services or both, facilitated by the e-commerce operator; or
  4. Any combination of the above-mentioned activities.

Here E-commerce operator means a non-resident who owns, operates or manages digital or electronic facility or platform for online sale of goods or online provision of services or both.

Consider the following example,

  1. Yash a resident in India orders goods from Amazon.com who is non-resident. Amazon.com needs to pay equalization levy on the amount of goods sold to Mr. Yash.
  2. If Amazon earns Rs. 20 Crores as Amazon Prime subscriptions from the persons as discussed in point II above, then Amazon needs to deposit Rs. 40 lakhs as Equalisation Levy to the credit of Indian Government being 2% of Rs. 20crores.
  3. Cloud storage services provided by non-resident companies like Google and Amazon shall also fall under the purview equalisation levy.
  4. Online gaming services are also included in the ambit of the equalisation levy.

IV. Non-applicability of Equalisation Levy in the following instances:

  1. Where an e-commerce service provider has a permanent establishment in India and the service provided is effectively connected with such permanent establishment.
  2. Where the sales/turnover or gross receipts of service provided by e-commerce operator does not exceed Rs 2 Crores during the year.

V. Due Dates for payment:

Equalization Levy shall be paid by every e-commerce operator to the Central Government on a quarterly basis as per the following schedule.

Furnishing of Statement:

Every Assessee or e-commerce operator shall furnish a statement in respect of all services provided by them to the Assessing Officer or any other person authorized by the Board within 30th June immediately following the financial year.

If an assessee notices any omission and wants to revise the statement furnished earlier the same can be revised within 2 years from the end of the financial year in which the return was filed.

VI. Penalty-Late fees & Interest:

  • Interest is charged at 1% of the outstanding levy for every month or part thereof is delayed.
  • If Equalization Levy is not deducted, a penalty equal to the amount of levy failed to be deducted.
  • If Equalization Levy is deducted but the not deposited penalty will be Rs. 1,000 per day maximum to the amount of the levy.
  • The penalty for late filing of the Statement is Rs. 100 per day till the non-compliance continues.

VII. Conclusion:

In order to broaden the scope of the Equalization levy beyond online advertisement, the Government extended the scope in the Finance Act, 2020 and included a tax on goods and/or service received or receivable from an e-commerce operator with effect from 1.4.2020. To summarize, at present, the said levy includes the following:

  • Advertising Services @ 6% payable by service receiver;
  • E-commerce supply of goods or services @2% payable by the e-commerce operator.

It was anticipated that the scope of this levy would further widen in Finance Act, 2021 or Finance Act, 2022, but no such amendments were made.

(This article represents the views of the firm only and does not intend to give any kind of legal opinion on any matter)

Vishal Kothari

Director | vishal.kothari@masd.co.in

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How Artificial Intelligence Is Shaping the Future of Tax Regulation in India

Numerous financial records processed annually, lakhs of tax notices generated and thousands of crores in tax revenue collected, the complexity and scale of regulation have reached unprecedented levels. Traditional methods can no longer keep pace with such scale of data. Therefore, to deal with new emerging problems in tax regulation the tax authorities have started to integrate artificial intelligence to automate the tax operations and fundamentally redefining them. From predictive analytics that flag anomalies, to intelligent systems that auto-populate returns and resolve queries in real time, AI is reshaping the very foundation of tax regulation in India. ‍

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DEEMED EXPORTS UNDER GST

Export of goods, in common parlance, means taking goods outside India. The process of supplying the goods(produced/manufactured in the country) on an international scale is known as Export. Such supply of goods and service contribute to the growth of an economy and thus enjoy the perk of being treated as zero-rated supplies. Such supplies are treated as zero-rated supplies under GST. However, there is a certain category of supplies, as notified by the Central Government, wherein the supply is treated as an export, even if the goods do not leave the national borders. The Central Government have notified such categories of supplies of goods as deemed exports. This means that such supplies shall be treated as exports even if such goods are not taken outside India.

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