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Will the taxmen’s POEM deter foreign investors?

Will the taxmen’s POEM deter foreign investors?
Credit: Thinkstock

Last month, the Central Board of Direct Taxes issued final guidelines to determine the Place of Effective Management (POEM) of a company. The guidelines came nearly two years after the government, in the 2015 budget, amended the provisions for tax residency of foreign companies.

Implementation of POEM was deferred by a year in the 2016 budget due to the absence of criteria to determine corporate residency. Why is POEM important? In short, because if a company’s place of effective management is India, it will be treated as a local resident and its global income will be taxable in the country.

POEM is an internationally recognised test to determine residence of a company incorporated in a foreign jurisdiction. It works to check companies who set up shell subsidiaries abroad to evade taxes. POEM is effective from 1 April 2016 and accordingly shall apply from assessment year 2017-18 onwards.

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POEM is one of three criteria of corporate residency that are widely identified under several jurisdictions. Place of a company’s incorporation (POI) and place of its central control and management (CCM) are the other two.

Almost all jurisdictions that impose tax on corporate entities determine the tax residence of such entities based on one of two types of tests or a combination thereof. The first type is formal and usually based on POI of the company. Under the POI test, for purposes of tax, a corporate entity is resident in the jurisdiction of its incorporation. The second type, CCM, and POEM are substantive and based on the 'real seat' of the corporation.

A corporation's real seat depends on some combination of factual elements, such as the location of its administrative headquarters or the location of the firm's centre of gravity as determined by the location of the employees and assets. The dichotomy between ‘formal’ and ‘substantive’ criteria makes an interesting inquiry.

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POEM versus POM

The concepts of POEM and POM (place of management) serve entirely different purposes. POM determines whether a company is resident in a particular country. POEM is a tiebreaker test whose purpose is to resolve cases of dual residence by determining in which of the two states it is to be found.

POEM is concerned with what happens in both states since its purpose is to resolve dual residence. According to a UK court, the term “effective” should be understood in the sense of the French “effective” which means “real.”

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In other words, the phrase POEM is to be approached by determining in which of the states the real management of a company is situated.

Even though the concept of POEM as proposed in the Indian guidelines is largely in line with the one defined by the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development, there is a marked departure between the two.

The proposed definition is much wider on account of the term 'at any time during the year'. This would require foreign companies to be careful with regard to their Indian management and governance structures to ensure that taxability in India is not triggered. This provision is likely to lead to prolonged litigation due to subjectivity involved in its interpretation, in the absence of detailed guidelines.

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Unique features

The final guidelines on POEM contain some unique features. The Active Business Outside India (ABOI) test has been provided, so as not to cover companies outside India which are engaged in active business.

The intent is not to target Indian multinationals engaged in business activity outside the country. The intent is to target shell companies and companies which are created for retaining income outside India although real control and management of affairs is located in India.

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Further, POEM is not to be determined by taking a “snapshot” view, but by considering activities performed over a period of time during the year for which POEM is determined.

Companies headquartered in India with subsidiaries, branch offices and other alliances across the globe will have to take note of their existing structures and review the additional compliance requirements that may get triggered due to the proposed changes in the definition of tax residency.

Interestingly, the final guidelines also clarify that if POEM is triggered for an intermediate holding company, it does not mean that POEM of all downstream subsidiaries is in India. In respect of companies which do not fulfill the ABOI test, the circular has listed several criteria and multiple factors to determine POEM, without defining the hierarchy of elimination and without providing guidance on the weightage of each factor.

Non-adversarial approach

The government of India has advocated a non-adversarial approach in tax administration. Thus, though the proposed change is in line with global tax practices, the implementation should also be on the lines of global tax practices.

Adequate administrative safeguards have been incorporated in the final guidelines by mandating that the assessing officer, before initiating an inquiry for POEM in a case of a taxpayer, will seek approval from the Principal Commissioner or Commissioner of Income-tax. The assessing officer shall also obtain approval from the Collegium of Principal Commissioners of Income-tax before holding that POEM of a non-resident company is in India.

However, the apprehension of foreign companies, which may be regarded as a tax resident of India due to the application of POEM rules, is not ill-founded. It needs to be seen how tax authorities implement the final guidelines.

Nishit Dhruva is managing partner and Khushboo Shah is an associate at law firm MDP & Partners.

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