India: Ruling on applicability of deduction non-discrimination clause

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

India: Ruling on applicability of deduction non-discrimination clause

nayak.jpg

Rajendra Nayak

To encourage compliance with withholding tax (WHT) provisions of the Indian Tax Laws (ITL), payments made without such compliance are disallowed as an expense for the payer, thereby enhancing its tax base. Relief from such disallowance can be availed where the resident recipient includes such payment as its income in its return of income (ROI), pays tax and certain other conditions are met. A comparable relief is absent where the recipient is a non-resident. However, like some of India's double taxation avoidance agreements (DTAA), the India – Japan DTAA contains a deduction neutrality clause in its non-discrimination article (DND clause). According to this clause, when computing taxable income of an Indian enterprise, payments made by it to a resident of Japan would be deductible under the same condition as if they had been paid to an Indian resident. In its recent ruling in the Mitsubishi Corporation India Pvt. Ltd case, the Delhi Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (Tribunal) had to analyse the applicability of the DND clause on certain payments to its Japanese group entities having permanent establishment (PE) in India. These payments were made without complying with WHT provisions. However, the recipient Japanese entities filed their ROIs, including such payment as income and paid the necessary taxes. The tax authorities disallowed the payments for non-compliance of WHT provisions and contended that protection under the DND clause cannot be accessed by an Indian resident taxpayer. Aggrieved by this, the taxpayer appealed to the Tribunal.

The Tribunal held that though the DND clause impacts income determination of Indian residents, the subject matter is payment to a Japanese tax resident. The DND clause was therefore rightly invoked by the taxpayer. Additionally, the DND clause is designed to provide parity in eligibility for deduction between payments made to residents and those made to non-residents. If WHT is a pre-condition for deductibility of payments to non-residents, it cannot be enforced unless there is a similar pre-condition on payments to residents.

As the payment to a resident does not result in disallowance of expense for the taxpayer where the resident recipient complies with requisite conditions, it will have to be allowed as a deduction by applying the DND clause where the non-resident recipient also complies with the relevant conditions.

The Tribunal has also elucidated various facets of availing the benefit of the DND clause. Separately, by a recent amendment, ITL has restricted the disallowance on payments made to residents, without WHT, to 30% of the payment. A corresponding change has not been made for payments to non-residents. This ruling should help taxpayers avail deduction parity in appropriate cases by invoking the DND clause.

Rajendra Nayak (rajendra.nayak@in.ey.com)

EY

Tel: +91 80 6727 5454

Website : www.ey.com/india

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

E-invoicing is currently characterised by dynamism, with fragmentation acting as a key catalyst for increasing interoperability, says Aida Cavalera of the International Observatory on eInvoicing
Pillar two and the US tax system ‘could work in harmony’, Scott Levine tells ITR in an exclusive interview to mark his arrival at Baker McKenzie
Peter White, who has a tax debt of A$2 million, has been banned for five years from seeking registration with Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board (TPB)
Wopke Hoekstra’s comments followed US measures aimed against ‘unfair foreign taxes’; in other news, Grant Thornton and Holland & Knight made key tax partner hires
An Administrative Review Tribunal ruling last month in Australia v Alcoa represents a 'concerning trend' for the tax authority, one expert tells ITR
A recent decision underlines that Indian courts are more willing to look beyond just legal compliance and examine whether foreign investment structures have real business substance
Following his Liberal Party’s election victory, one source expects Mark Carney to follow the international consensus on pillar two, as experts assess the new administration
A German economics professor was reportedly ‘irritated’ by how the Finnish ministry of finance used his data
Countries that care about the fair taxation of tech multinationals and equitable global distribution of wealth should back the UN’s tax framework, writes economist Abdelmalek Riad
The cuts disproportionately affected staff in certain positions, the report also found; in other news, MHA announced the €24m acquisition of Baker Tilly South East Europe
Gift this article