Employee Stock Options or ESOPs are an effective way to remunerate and motivate an employee to achieve higher objectives for an organisation. The aftermath of the pandemic saw a rising wave of ESOP being granted to the Indian employees of foreign multinational companies. In short, the Indian employees of foreign subsidiaries get ESOPs from the foreign parent company as a compensation package. This is quite a common practice for foreign companies to issue ESOPs to the Indian employees of their subsidiary company.
As the employees are employed with the Indian subsidiary company, the discount/cost of ESOP that is initially borne by the foreign company is often passed to the Indian subsidiary company. Accordingly, payment of such costs is made by the Indian subsidiary company to the foreign parent company without any TDS or withholding taxes. This appears quite simple in a logical transaction until this caught the attention of Indian tax authorities.
The tax authorities in India have now started to question the position of no tax deduction on such costs paid by the Indian subsidiary company to the Foreign parent company. In some cases, the tax authorities have disallowed the payment made and questioned if the said transaction can be even treated at allowable cost against income. Further, there is no clarity on the effective percentage of the tax rate that can be applied to the said amount which can range anywhere between 10% – 42%. It is understood that the tax authorities are investigating the said transactions as they are of the assumption that some of the cost pertains to royalty or similar expenses and tax should be deducted on the said amount.
In addition to the Income-tax troubles, transfer pricing authorities have always questioned the nature of such expenditure and have expected a return on such an expenditure incurred by the Indian subsidiary company.
With such a disallowance due to the non-withholding of taxes and transfer pricing, the issue may act as a double whammy for the taxpayers. If such an approach from tax authorities is left ignored or left for courts to settle, would hamper the ease of doing business and could cost important investments to the shining investment destination.
From a technical point of view, let us understand why there would not be taxes withheld on the cost paid by the Indian subsidiary to the foreign subsidiary:
Considering the above, if you are an Indian subsidiary company, and your employees have been issued ESOP specifically of a Foreign parent company, you may want to undertake the following steps:
i. Review of the ESOP agreement to evaluate tax implications from all angles.
ii. Validate the costs that are booked due to ESOPs from Income-tax, transfer pricing, GST and FEMA point of view.
iii. Obtain an opinion to ascertain your position, review the transaction and detail out legal opinion to make the case strong along with the commercial sense.
iv. In case of scrutiny, get technical representation support where the right legal and technical interpretations are represented before the tax authorities.
Hope you have found this article interesting and informative. In case you need any further information or have any clarification, you can reach us at surajagrawal@transprice.in or akshaykenkre@transprice.in.
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