FM Flags BEPS in
Japan Meet of Big Powers of G20
Calls for Containment of Oil
Prices, Extradition of Economic Offenders to Home Countries
Nirmala
Sitharaman, Union Minister of Finance & Corporate
Affairs, Government of India, participated in the G20 Finance Ministers and Central
Bank Governors meeting and associated events during June 8-9, 2019 at Fukuoka, Japan.
She was accompanied by Subhash C. Garg,
Finance Secretary & Secretary Economic Affairs, Dr. Viral Acharya, Deputy Governor
of RBI and other officers.
Smt.
Sitharaman noted the urgency to fix the issue of determining
right nexus and profit allocation solution for taxing the profits made by digital
economy companies. Appreciating the significant
progress made under the taxation agenda including the Base Erosion and Profit
Shifting (BEPS), tax challenges from digital economy and exchange of information
under the aegis of G20, Smt. Sitharaman congratulated
the Japanese Presidency for successfully carrying these tasks forward.
The Union
Minister of Finance & Corporate Affairs noted that the work on tax challenges
arising from the digitalisation of economy is entering
a critical phase with an update to the G20, due next year. In this respect, Smt.
Sitharaman strongly supported the potential solution based
on the concept of ‘significant economic presence’ of businesses taking into account
the evidence of their purposeful and sustained interaction with the economy of a
country. This concept has been piloted by India and supported
by large number of countries including the G-24. She expressed confidence
that a consensus-based global solution, which should also be equitable and simple,
would be reached by 2020.
Smt.
Sitharaman welcomed the commencement of automatic exchange
of financial account information (AEOI) on a global basis with almost 90 jurisdictions
successfully exchanging information in 2018. This would ensure that tax evaders
could no more hide their offshore financial accounts from the tax administration.
She urged the G20/Global Forum to further expand the network
of automatic exchanges by identifying jurisdictions including developing countries
and financial centers that are relevant but have not yet committed to any timeline.
Appropriate action needs to be taken against non-compliant
jurisdictions. In this respect she called upon the international
community to agree on a toolkit of defensive measures, which can be taken against
such non-compliant jurisdictions.
Earlier,
the Union Minister for Finance & Corporate Affairs participated in the Ministerial
Symposium on International Taxation and spoke in the session on the ongoing global
efforts to counter tax avoidance and evasion. During the session, she also spoke
on the tax challenges for addressing digitalisation of
the economy and emphasised that nexus was important.
Smt.
Sitharaman also raised the need for international cooperation
on dealing with fugitive economic offenders who flee their countries to escape from
the consequences of law. She informed about the fugitive economic offenders law
passed by India which provides for denial of access to
courts until the fugitive returns to the country. This law also provides for confiscation
of their properties and selling them off. She drew attention to the practice permitted
by many jurisdictions, which allow economic offenders to use investment-based schemes
to obtain residence or citizenship to escape from legal consequences and underlined
the need to deal with such practices. She urged that closer collaboration and coordinated
action were required to bring such economic offenders to face law.
Smt.
Sitharaman highlighted the need for the G20 to keep a
close watch on global current account imbalances to ensure that they do not result
in excessive global volatility and tensions. The global imbalances left a detrimental
impact on the growth of emerging markets. Unilateral actions taken by some advanced
economies adversely affect the exports and the inward flow of investments in these
economies. She wondered if the accumulation of cash reserves by large companies
indicated the reluctance of these companies to increase investments. This reluctance
could have adverse implications on growth and investments and possibly leading to
concentration of market power. She also urged the G20 to remain cognizant of fluctuations
in international oil market and study measures that can bring benefits to both the
oil exporting and importing countries.
In another
session on infrastructure investment, Smt. Sitharaman
emphasised on the importance of making investments in
cost-effective and disaster resilient infrastructure for growth and development.
She suggested the G20 focus on identifying constraints to flow of resources into
infrastructure sector in the developing world and solutions for overcoming them.
She also took note of the close collaboration of India, Japan and other like-minded
countries, aligned with the Sendai Framework, in developing a roadmap to create
a global Coalition on Disaster Resilient Infrastructure.
The Japanese
Presidency’s priority issue of aging was also discussed.
Smt. Sitharaman highlighted that closer collaboration
between countries with high old age dependency ratio and those with low old age
dependency ratio was necessary for dealing with the policy challenges posed by ageing.
She suggested that if ageing countries with shrinking labour
force allow calibrated mobility of labour with portable
social security benefits, the recipient countries can not
only take care of the aged but also have positive effect on global growth. Smt.
Sitharaman said that India’s demography presented a dual
policy challenge since India’s old age dependency ratio is lesser than Japan while
at the same time India’s aged population in absolute numbers exceeds that of Japan.
She detailed the policy measures that Government of India is taking to address these
challenges.
While
speaking on the priority of Japanese Presidency on financing of universal health
coverage (UHC) she emphasised the importance of a holistic
approach which encompasses plurality of pathways to achieve
UHC, including through traditional and complementary systems of medicine.
Smt.
Sitharaman also held bilateral meeting with Mr Phillip Hammod, Chancellor of United
Kingdom on the sidelines of the FMCBG meeting at Fukuoka and discussed efforts undertaken
by both sides for closer collaboration between India and United Kingdom in several
areas and enhance cooperation between the two countries in tax matters.