Optimize IAS
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Courses
    • Prelims Test Series
      • LAQSHYA 2026 Prelims Mentorship
      • Prelims Test Series 2025
    • CSE Integrated Guidance 2025
      • ARJUNA PRIME 2025
    • Mains Mentorship
      • Arjuna 2026 Mains Mentorship
  • Portal Login
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Courses
    • Prelims Test Series
      • LAQSHYA 2026 Prelims Mentorship
      • Prelims Test Series 2025
    • CSE Integrated Guidance 2025
      • ARJUNA PRIME 2025
    • Mains Mentorship
      • Arjuna 2026 Mains Mentorship
  • Portal Login

Supreme court judgement in the Nestle Income tax case sets bad precedent

  • November 8, 2023
  • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
  • Category: DPN Topics
No Comments

 

 

Supreme court judgement in the Nestle Income tax case sets bad precedent

Subject: Economy

Section: External Sector

In News:  Supreme Court’s (SC) recent ruling states that no automatic international treaty benefit, including a lower withholding tax, is available to foreign companies operating in India.

Key Points:

  • The issue involves Nestle and some other EU companies claiming lower withholding tax of 5% instead of the 10% based on the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) that India had signed with Switzerland and other EU countries.
  • This was done on the basis of invoking the most favoured nation (MFN) clause in the tax treaties.

What do the DTAAs mean for taxation?

  • India’s bilateral DTAAs with the Netherlands, France, and Switzerland — all three countries are members of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) — require imposing a 10% withholding tax (tax on dividends paid by Indian entities of foreign companies to the residents of Netherlands, France, and Switzerland).
  •  This provision allows India to sign tax treaties with other countries to avoid an income being taxed twice.
  • These DTAAs also contain an MFN provision.

What does the MFN clause say?

  • If India extends a preferential tax treatment to any third country “which is a member of the OECD”, the same treatment should be accorded to the Netherlands, France, and Switzerland under their respective DTAAs.
  • Now India’s DTAAs with Slovenia, Colombia, and Lithuania have a lower withholding tax requirement of 5%. Hence the other countries are claiming the 5% rate as per the terms of MFN clause.

What was the issue before the courts?

  • When India signed DTAAs with these countries, they were not OECD members but joined the group later.
  • When the matter initially came before the Delhi High Court, it held that under the MFN provision, the preferential tax in, say, the India-Slovenia DTAA should extend to the India-Netherlands DTAA.

What does the Supreme Court ruling say?

  • The Supreme Court overruled the HC order and held that when the India-Netherlands DTAA was signed, Slovenia was not an OECD member. Thus, the benefits given to Slovenia, which became an OECD member later, do not apply to the India-Netherlands DTAA.
  • Further SC noted that for MFN clause to come in effect, a separate notification for the same under Section 90 of the Income-Tax Act needs to be issued.
  • This ruling will impose a tax burden estimated to be ₹11,000 crore on foreign investors. It may also lead to opening past cases.

Why is the judgement problematic?

  • One of the foremost challenges foreign investors face in India is the uncertainty in taxation measures. 
  • Taxation-related improbabilities arise not just due to the actions of the executive but also the judiciary. This makes doing business in India difficult for foreign players.
  • The critical question here is why the MFN clause could not be given effect in India without notification for the same under Section 90 of the Income-Tax Act.
  • The SC judgement freezes the provisions of a treaty in time when there is nothing in the DTAA treaties that says that it applies only to countries that were members on the day the treaty was signed. 
  • SC has used domestic interpretative techniques to interpret a term in an international treaty. 
  • Such an interpretation defeats the purpose of including non-discrimination standards such as MFN in economic treaties. 
  • MFN in a treaty ensures that future benefits given to a third country by one of the treaty-signing countries become automatically available to its treaty partners.
Dualism doctrine

  • Supreme Court has held a dualist view of law when it ruled that to give effect to the MFN provision in the DTAA, notification under Section 90(1) of the Income Tax Act is necessary and mandatory.
  • Thus, the Court advocated the doctrine of dualism wherein international law is not enforceable domestically till it is transformed into municipal law through enabling legislation.
  • While it is true that the Indian Constitution provides for such formal dualism, the Supreme Court has moved away from this principle toward the monist tradition of incorporating international law in the domestic legal regime, even if it is not explicitly incorporated, provided the international law is not inconsistent with domestic law.
economy Supreme court judgement in the Nestle Income tax case sets bad precedent

Recent Posts

  • Daily Prelims Notes 23 March 2025 March 23, 2025
  • Challenges in Uploading Voting Data March 23, 2025
  • Fertilizers Committee Warns Against Under-Funding of Nutrient Subsidy Schemes March 23, 2025
  • Tavasya: The Fourth Krivak-Class Stealth Frigate Launched March 23, 2025
  • Indo-French Naval Exercise Varuna 2024 March 23, 2025
  • No Mismatch Between Circulating Influenza Strains and Vaccine Strains March 23, 2025
  • South Cascade Glacier March 22, 2025
  • Made-in-India Web Browser March 22, 2025
  • Charting a route for IORA under India’s chairship March 22, 2025
  • Mar-a-Lago Accord and dollar devaluation March 22, 2025

About

If IAS is your destination, begin your journey with Optimize IAS.

Hi There, I am Santosh I have the unique distinction of clearing all 6 UPSC CSE Prelims with huge margins.

I mastered the art of clearing UPSC CSE Prelims and in the process devised an unbeatable strategy to ace Prelims which many students struggle to do.

Contact us

moc.saiezimitpo@tcatnoc

For More Details

Work with Us

Connect With Me

Course Portal
Search