International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 8 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2023

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

Webinar: An exclusive look at India’s 2022 budget

Sponsored by

logo.png
Register now. The webinar will be broadcast live at 11.30am GMT/5pm IST on Tuesday, February 1 2022

ITR will host a live webinar, along with Dhruva Advisors and Taxsutra, on Tuesday, February 1 to analyse the implications of the tax proposals in India’s 2022 budget.

Register here to listen to the webinar on February 1

India has moved past the key milestone of 150 crores vaccination jabs within a year. While the efforts towards getting more and more of the population vaccinated will continue (including children and booster doses for senior citizens), the focus now shifts to the North Block.

Whilst several businesses witnessed resilience and uptick in the economy in 2021, it is expected that the pandemic will soon enter into the endemic stage. This sets out the stage for growth and expansion of the Indian economy. Against this backdrop, the upcoming Union Budget 2022-23, which will be announced on February 1 2022, is expected to assume great significance in inking out the growth trajectory of the Indian economy. 

With encouraging tax collections, Indian corporations are expecting some key announcements which will enable them to reset their growth agenda and also help stressed sectors recover. At the same time, managing fiscal prudence, balancing inflation targets, and public spending shall be an interesting convergence to watch out for. 

Dhruva Advisors jointly with ITR and Taxsutra are hosting a webinar to discuss tax proposals and the impact on the Indian economy and businesses of various proposals announced in the Union Budget 2022-23.

The discussions will be led by Dinesh Kanabar - CEO of Dhruva Advisors, Sanjiv Mehta - Chairman and Managing Director of Hindustan Unilever Limited and President of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI), as well as other partners from Dhruva Advisors. The webinar will moderated by ITR's Prin Shasiharan.

The webinar will be broadcast live at 11.30am GMT/5pm IST on Tuesday, February 1 2022 - Register now

 

Dinesh Kanabar

39ad023b70d14ecf85c758ba241afade

 

 

CEO

Dhruva Advisors

LinkedIn profile

E: dinesh.kanabar@dhruvaadvisors.com

Dinesh Kanabar is a stalwart in the tax industry and has been widely recognised by his peers as being among the top tax advisors in India. He was recently named as the winner of ITR’s Asia Tax Practice Leader of the Year award for 2020.

Prior to founding Dhruva Advisors, Dinesh held a series of leadership positions across several large professional service organisations in India. He was the deputy CEO of KPMG India, chairman of KPMG’s tax practice, deputy CEO of RSM & Co, and head of tax and regulatory at PwC.

Dinesh is a member of the National Executive Committee of FICCI and is currently a mentor of the FICCI Committee on Taxation. He has also worked with the government of India on several policy committees. He was a member of the Rangachary Committee constituted by the prime minister of India to deal with tax reforms in the information technology sector and for evolving safe harbour rules.

 

Sanjiv Mehta

cd391077e0774fb5830beef4df6e7f72

 

 

Managing director

Hindustan Unilever Limited

LinkedIn profile

Sanjiv Mehta is the chairman and managing director of Hindustan Unilever Limited. He has led Unilever’s business in India and South Asia since October 2013, and has been with Unilever for nearly 28 years,

Sanjiv holds a bachelor’s degree in commerce and is a chartered accountant from The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. He has also completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. 

Sanjiv is a director on the board of the Indian School of Business, President of Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, a member of the Breach Candy Hospital Trust and the South Asia Advisory Board of Harvard Business School. He chairs Xynteo’s ‘Vikaasa’, a coalition of top Indian and multinational companies and co-chairs the advisory network to the high-level panel for a ‘sustainable ocean economy.’

 

Prin Shasiharan

8bca26f2608d4db69ac792dd3b1786b1

 

 

Senior commercial editor

ITR, Euromoney Institutional Investor

LinkedIn profile

E: prin.shasiharan@euromoneyplc.com

Prin Shasiharan drives thought leadership with global tax advisors for ITR’s insight projects, in addition to managing contributions from partner firms. He has hosted and moderated high-level events involving eminent tax practitioners. He also manages commercial collaborations for other Euromoney brands including The Deal, Managing IP and IFLR.

Prin has experience in tax compliance, financial crime and regulatory roles, and has previously worked for international organisations including the United Nations and the Council of Europe.

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Premier League football clubs are accused of avoiding paying up to £470 million in UK tax, while Malta is poised to overhaul its unique corporate tax system.
Bartosz Doroszuk of MDDP offers insights on Poland’s new tax legislation on shifted profits, as the implementation deadline looms nearer.
Four tax specialists preview the UK’s transfer pricing requirements, which come into effect on April 1.
The rise of the QDMTT will likely change how countries compete on tax and transfer pricing policy, but it may not reverse decades of falling corporate tax rates.
ITR’s latest quarterly PDF is going live today, leading on the EU’s BEFIT initiative and wider tax reforms in the bloc.
COVID-19 and an overworked HMRC may have created the ‘perfect storm’ for reduced prosecutions, according to tax professionals.
Participants in the consultation on the UN secretary-general’s report into international tax cooperation are divided – some believe UN-led structures are the way forward, while others want to improve existing ones. Ralph Cunningham reports.
The German government unveils plans to implement pillar two, while EY is reportedly still divided over ‘Project Everest’.
With the M&A market booming, ITR has partnered with correspondents from firms around the globe to provide a guide to the deal structures being employed and tax authorities' responses.
Xing Hu, partner at Hui Ye Law Firm in Shanghai, looks at the implications of the US Uyghur Forced Labor Protection Act for TP comparability analysis of China.