With industry protesting the recent transfer pricing orders of the income-tax department, especially in the case of Shell India, the Central Board of Direct Taxes has started looking at the modalities for handling transfer-pricing cases.
The I-T department’s panel, which has been assigned with the job of drafting rules for foreign tax credit, is now looking at this area, said a senior finance ministry official, who did not want to be named.
“The committee will work out the modalities for handling such cases and submit it to the finance ministry,” said the official.
Transfer pricing is the value at which companies trade products, services or assets, including shares, between units in different countries.
The I-T department has charged Shell India, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Netherlands-based energy company Royal Dutch Shell, with undervaluing share transfer within the group by Rs 15,220 crore (Rs 152.2 billion), and, thus, evading tax.
The order relates to the issue of 87 million shares by Shell India to its sole parent Shell Gas BV, in March 2009. Against a fresh equity injection of Rs 87 crore (Rs 870 million), shares aggregating to 87 million were issued at a value of Rs 10 per share. But the tax authorities value this at Rs 183