Parthasarathi Shome

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

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

Parthasarathi Shome

Economist

Parthasarathi Shome

The name of Parthasarathi Shome has become well known to taxpayers in India, and the followers of this list, in the past few years. It seems every time the government needs someone to take charge of an initiative to modernise the tax system, they call on the economist who has the rank of minister of state.

“I have two roles I cannot separate,” he says. “One is chairing the Tax Administration Reforms Commission (TARC), which is the first time in decades, if not ever, that we have had something like this. It focuses on administration rather than policy, on the obstacles and hurdles in the tax system.

“The other is the weekly forum, where taxpayers through their chambers can make representations to me and the tax department about what areas of the system we should be looking at, and we discuss these with the minister. The forum is short-term and the TARC is long-term.”

Shome says the forum has delivered results: “It hastened the introduction of the transfer pricing safe harbour rules, which came out in August, and clarified issues surrounding the negative list for service tax and input tax credits.”

The TARC was set up in August 2013 and given 18 months to come up with proposals to make the tax system work better. Its first report is due out in April 2014 and will cover people functions, the use of IT for tax governance, customer-focused service and improving service delivery. It will then move on to issues such as improving internal processes and how dispute resolution can be streamlined. There will be reports every three months from then until early 2015, when the commission is due to finish its work. “It [the TARC] has very long terms of reference, oriented towards structural reform in tax administration,” Shome says.

Shome points out that these are not the only things that are happening in tax in India. The work to develop the Direct Taxes Code (DTC) and the national VAT system is still continuing. The intention was to introduce the DTC in the winter session of parliament, which began on December 5, though there are some doubts about that now.

“He enjoys the confidence of the taxpayers both for his erudition and his patience and kind approach to tax disputes,” says Palaniappan Chidambaram, the finance minister of Shome.

The Global Tax 50 2013

« Previous

Pascal Saint-Amans

View the complete list

Next »

Starbucks, Amazon & Google

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Emmanuel Manda tells ITR about early morning boxing, working on Zambia’s only refinery, and what makes tax cool
Hany Elnaggar examines how AI is reshaping tax administration across the Gulf Cooperation Council, transforming the taxpayer experience from periodic reporting to continuous compliance
The APA resolution signals opportunities for multinationals and will pacify investor concerns, local experts told ITR
Businesses that adopt a proactive strategy and work closely with their advisers will be in the greatest position to transform HMRC’s relief scheme into real support for growth
The ATO and other authorities have been clamping down on companies that have failed to pay their tax
The flagship 2025 tax legislation has sprawling implications for multinationals, including changes to GILTI and foreign-derived intangible income. Barry Herzog of HSF Kramer assesses the impact
Hani Ashkar, after more than 12 years leading PwC in the region, is set to be replaced by Laura Hinton
With the three-year anniversary of the PwC tax scandal approaching, it’s time to take stock of how tax agent regulation looks today
Rolling out the global minimum tax has increased complexity, according to Baker McKenzie; in other news, Donald Trump has announced a 25% tariff on countries doing business with Iran
Among those joining EY is PwC’s former international tax and transfer pricing head
Gift this article