India-France DTAA Amendment: A Major Step
Towards Investment, Transparency, and Tax Certainty
In a significant step towards further strengthening
economic cooperation between India and France, the governments of both
countries have signed a protocol to amend the India-France Double Taxation
Avoidance Agreement (DTAA/DTAC). This agreement will not only encourage
bilateral investment but also ensure transparency and certainty in the tax
system.
Objective of the Agreement
¨ The primary objective of
this amendment is to update the tax system in line with international tax
standards. Given the rapid changes in the global economy and the increasing
influence of digital transactions, it has become necessary to make tax rules
between countries more clear and equitable. This protocol is an important
initiative in this direction.
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¨ The protocol was signed
during the visit of the French President to India, reflecting strengthened
bilateral economic cooperation.
¨
The original India–France
Double Taxation Avoidance Convention (DTAC) was signed on 29 September 1992 and
came into force on 1 August 1994.
¨ The newly signed protocol
updates the treaty framework in line with contemporary international tax norms.
Key Highlights of the Amendment to the India–France
DTAC
¨ Most-Favoured-Nation
(MFN) Clause Deletion: The MFN clause has been officially removed.Previously,
this clause allowed France to claim lower tax rates if India offered better
terms to another OECD country.The removal follows a landmark Supreme Court
ruling (e.g., Nestlé SA case) stating MFN benefits cannot be automatically
invoked without a specific government notification.
¨
Capital Gains Taxation:
The Amending Protocol provides full taxing rights in respect of capital gains
from the sale of company shares to the source country (where the company is
resident).
¨
Taxation of Dividends:
Replaces the single 10% rate with a split-rate structure.
¨
5% tax: For investors
holding at least 10% of a company’s capital.
¨
15% tax: For all other
cases.
¨ Modification of ‘Fees for
Technical Services’ (FTS) Definition: Aligns the definition of FTS with the
provisions of the India–US Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement.
Expansion of Permanent Establishment (PE)
Scope
¨
Introduces the concept of
“Service PE.”
¨ Expands the scope of
taxation of business profits arising from cross-border service activities.
Updated Exchange of Information Provisions
¨ Modernizes provisions
relating to the exchange of information in accordance with international
standards.Strengthens cooperation between India and France in combating tax
evasion and avoidance.
¨
New Article on Assistance
in Collection of Taxes: A new article on assistance in collection of taxes
enables each country to help the other in recovering tax claims, thereby strengthening
cross-border enforcement and compliance. Incorporation of BEPS Multilateral
Instrument (MLI) Provisions: Integrates applicable provisions of the BEPS MLI
into the DTAC.The Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) Multilateral
Instrument (MLI) is a global treaty designed to modernise the existing network
of bilateral tax treaties (DTAAs) to prevent tax avoidance by multinational
corporations.Significance of the India-France Double Taxation Avoidance
Convention (DTAC)
¨ Source-Based Taxation: By
allocating capital gains taxation on shares to the company’s state of
residence, the protocol firmly secures India’s taxing rights over gains from
shares of Indian companies held by French investors, curbing treaty shopping
opportunities.
¨ Removal of Ambiguity: By deleting the MFN clause, it eliminates long-standing legal disputes regarding whether lower rates from other OECD treaties could be “imported” into the India–France agreement.
¨ Digital & Service Modernisation: The introduction of Service PE and India–US style FTS language modernises the treaty for service and knowledge-intensive business models, aligning it with India’s newer treaty practice and international norms.