MoF Notifies Advance Price Agreement (APA) Scheme
The Ministry of Finance has notified an “Advance
Pricing Agreement Scheme” (Rules 10F to 10T of Income Tax Rules, 1962) vide
notification No. 36/2012 dated 30-8-2012. The Finance Act, 2012 had inserted
sections 92CC and 92CD in the Income Tax Act 1961 introducing the provisions of
Advance Pricing Agreement (APA). The APA Scheme shall come into effect from the
date of its publication in the Official Gazette, i.e. from 30.08.2012.
An APA is an agreement between the Central Board of Direct
Taxes and any person, which determines, in advance, the arm’s length price or
specifies the manner of the determination of arm’s length price (or both), in
relation to an international transaction. Hence, once APA has been entered into
with respect to an international transaction, the arm’s length price with
respect to that international transaction, for the period specified in the APA,
will be determined only in accordance with the APA. The APA process is
voluntary and will supplement appeal and other Double Taxation Avoidance
Agreement (DTAA) mechanism for resolving transfer pricing dispute. The term of
APA can be a maximum of five years.
The APA scheme notifies three types of APA: unilateral,
bilateral and multilateral. The choice is on the applicant to choose a
particular type of APA at the time of making the application. Unilateral APA is
an agreement between the Board and the applicant and this process does not
involve any agreement with the treaty partner. In bilateral and multilateral
APA request, the applicant is required to make an application with the
Competent Authority of India as well as the Competent Authority of the other
country.
As is the international practice, before formally applying
for the APA there will be a pre-filing consultation between the taxpayer and
the Government to enable the applicant and the APA team to assess the
possibility of entering into an APA.
The formal APA application can be filed after the pre-filing
consultation accompanied by the payment of fees as notified. In case of
unilateral APA, the application is required to be furnished with the Director
General of Income Tax (International Taxation), New Delhi and in case of
bilateral/multilateral APA, the application is required to be furnished with
the Competent Authority of India, i.e. Joint Secretary (FT&TR-I) in the
Ministry of Finance. In case of bilateral/multilateral APA, the applicant must
initiate the procedure for entering into APA with the other country as well and
furnish evidence to the Competent Authority of India regarding the same.
The APA scheme has many advantages. It will provide tax
certainty with regard to determination of arm’s length price of the
international transaction with respect to which the APA has been entered into,
reduce the risk of potential double taxation through bilateral or multilateral
APA, reduce compliance cost by eliminating the risk of transfer pricing audit
and resolving long drawn and time consuming litigation and other dispute
resolution process and alleviate the burden of record keeping as the taxpayer
knows in advance the required documentation to be maintained to substantiate
the agreed terms and conditions of the agreement.
The
aforesaid Notification relating to “Advance Pricing Agreement Scheme” gives
details regarding the process and relevant forms. It also contains information
regarding the annual compliance report and provisions regarding cancellation
and revision of APA.